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Orban accuses Ukraine of election meddling through ‘secret operations'

Orban accuses Ukraine of election meddling through ‘secret operations'

Russia Today12 hours ago
Ukraine has launched secret intelligence operations in Hungary to influence the upcoming 2026 parliamentary elections, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has claimed.
In an interview on Kossuth Radio on Friday, Orban accused Kiev of trying to bring a pro-Ukrainian government to power in Budapest to clear the way for the country's EU membership, which his government opposes.
Ukraine formally applied to join the EU in 2022. Brussels backed the bid, granted Kiev candidate status, and set a membership target of 2030. Orban warned the move would drag the bloc into direct conflict with Russia and burden taxpayers with decades of military aid. Last week, he vetoed an EU Council statement on Ukraine, thus blocking accession talks. He cited public opposition in the Voks 2025 referendum, where over two million Hungarians – 95% of voters – rejected Ukraine's EU bid. Because unanimous approval is required for EU accession, talks cannot proceed unless Hungary changes course.
'They are continuously carrying out secret operations in Hungary,' Orban said, referring to the Kiev regime. 'There is very active Ukrainian intelligence service activity, not only through exerting pressure on politicians, but also on the intellectual world, the thought-forming circles and the media.'
Orban said the goal of these efforts is 'to create another major party' to win the 2026 parliamentary election and implement decisions made by 'Brussels bureaucrats,' including on Ukraine's accession.
'It's happening, and not just from Ukraine's side, by the way – there's this shadowy, dark underbelly of international politics… the bureaucrats are using large amounts of money in Hungary to influence politics,' he added.
He pointed to the opposition center-right Tisza Party, which he claimed was 'manufactured' by Brussels to help Ukraine join the EU by winning the elections. The party recently conducted an unofficial survey on Ukrainian membership, saying that 58% of 1.1 million respondents expressed approval for the notion. Although Tisza leader Peter Magyar earlier said Ukraine doesn't yet meet EU accession criteria, he indicated his party would support negotiations if it wins the elections next year.
Orban, however, argued that if the EU accepts Ukraine it 'also accepts war,' which he said 'will ruin our economy.' Orban added that if other EU nations held referendums, 'in every single country people would say no [to Ukraine membership] exactly like they did in Hungary.'
Moscow had previously called Ukraine's EU aspirations its 'sovereign right' if the bloc stayed focused on economics. However, with Brussels ramping up military spending, Russian officials have grown critical. Security Council Deputy Chairman and former President Dmitry Medvedev said last week the EU had become 'a politicized, globalist, and fiercely Russophobic organization' and warned that Ukraine's membership in the bloc would now be 'a danger to our country.'
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