Hungarian Foreign Minister argues Russia and the US could make peace in Ukraine
The only way to save lives is through peace, not weapons deliveries or sanctions, Péter Szijjártó, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, told lawmakers in parliament on Monday, calling on them to adopt a “pro-peace declaration” submitted by the ruling parties.
In a speech ahead of the debate, Szijjártó said the war had so far proved “disastrous”, with “hundreds of thousands dead, millions displaced, hundreds of thousands of families torn apart and thousands drafted forcefully, while whole regions are in ruins.” Although regional, he said, the war had global implications. He added that time was running out to stop it from turning into a world war. “Meanwhile, the European economy is floundering.”
Szijjártó insisted that Europe and “the transatlantic region” were “in a state of war psychosis”. Some in Brussels, he said, saw weapons deliveries to Ukraine as a competition between the US and Europe in terms of who could provide more. Given that the war is situated in Europe, it is Europe that felt its negative effects “directly”, he added.
As a neighbouring country, Hungary has firsthand experience of the suffering the war has caused. “This war cannot be won, it can only have losers”, Szijjártó said.
The Hungarians of Transcarpathia are being drafted into the Ukrainian military, and some have already died, he said.
Although Hungary is not responsible for the war, the country and its citizens have already paid a high price for it, Szijjártó said. “No one can expect us to sacrifice even more,” he said.
“The international community should focus on saving lives, but that is only possible through peace rather than delivering weapons and imposing sanctions,” he said.
Sanctions have failed nine times, “and you would think we shouldn’t try it a tenth time,” he said. The EU, however, is preparing to do just that, he said.
The global majority is on the side of peace, and Hungary is part of that majority, he said. Peace requires open channels of communication so peace talks can remain a possibility, he said.
Sustainable results will be “impossible” without direct talks between the US and Russia, he said.
Transcarpathian Hungarians
Meanwhile, Hungarians in Ukraine are losing one minority right after the other and are suffering provocations at a time when Hungary is in the midst of the largest humanitarian operation of its history to help Ukrainian refugees, he said.
“Even as 1,247 Hungarian schools have accepted Ukrainian children, Ukraine is preparing to close minority schools from September, to strip [minorities] from the possibility to do their school-leaving exams and university admissions in their mother tongue, and take away universities’ right to choose the language of education,” Szijjártó said.
Hungary stands by Transcarpathian Hungarians and will use all international forums to aid them, he said.
Szijjártó called on lawmakers to “become a part of the global pro-peace majority” and adopt the pro-peace resolution of the ruling parties.
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2 Comments
Interesting read – opinion piece by Mr. Aleksashenko, former deputy minister of finance of Russia
https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2023/2/28/russia-after-a-year-of-sanctions
Appears his insights differ from Mr. Szijjártó’s.
Another share – skip to 19 minutes for effects of sanctions if you can’t be bothered with the full video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gSySThLL6MM