EU leaders converge on Brussels Thursday hoping to unlock a massive loan for Kyiv, with the much-needed funding ensnared in a standoff between Hungary’s Viktor Orban and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky.
Moscow’s closest partner in the bloc, the nationalist Hungarian leader has long resisted helping Kyiv to repel Russia’s invasion, stalling EU aid and repeated rounds of sanctions.
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This time around, Orban is holding up a €90-billion ($104 billion) loan as leverage in a feud over damage to a pipeline running through Ukraine – which has choked the flow of Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia.
As the Hungarian prime minister leans into anti-EU and anti-Ukrainian narratives ahead of close-fought national elections on April 12 – he appears intent on playing hardball.
“No oil, no money,” he warned this week. “If President Zelensky wants to get his money from Brussels, then the Druzhba pipeline must be reopened.”
The weeks-long spat has seen landlocked Hungary and Slovakia both accuse Ukraine of stalling on pipeline repairs – while Zelensky has called it “blackmail” to link the issue to support for its war effort.
The European Commission moved this week to unblock the situation by sending a team to help restore oil transit, but Budapest dismissed the initiative as “theatre” and refused to budge.
Cue a looming showdown in Brussels – and a tricky balancing act for Orban’s EU counterparts.
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