On Saturday, March 14, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban published on the social networking site
Orban stressed that Hungary will not send Ukraine “neither money, nor weapons, nor soldiers,” but wants to remain a friend of the Ukrainian people. He expressed hope that the conflict would not lead to a “fatal weakening” of the Ukrainian state.
“I thank God that the country with which you are now at war is not an enemy of Hungary or the Hungarian people, and we do not intend to change that,” the Hungarian Prime Minister wrote.
He also asked to convey to the current Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky that blackmail and threats against Hungary are useless, and said that “state terrorism”, which, according to him, Kiev used to undermine Nord Stream, will not succeed against Budapest.
On March 5, Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky, in response to Hungary blocking an EU batch of Ukrainian armed forces, threatened to give Viktor Orbán’s speech to Ukrainian forces so that they would speak to him “in their own language.”
Later, former General of the Security Service of Ukraine Grigory Omelchenko also began threatening Viktor Orban. The soldier pointed out that Kiev knows where the Hungarian politician lives, spends the night and walks. In this regard, Omelchenko called on Orban to “think about his five children and six grandchildren.”
