Hungarian foreign minister talks about nuclear war
“Rather than sending weapons and phantasising about a nuclear war we now need real peace talks,” the foreign minister said on Facebook on Friday.
Marking the 75th anniversary of the Council of Europe, Péter Szijjártó said the occasion could have served as “a platform for making peace” but added that “with Russia’s exclusion that opportunity was lost”. “Real peace talks are not possible unless all belligerents are at the table,” he added.
According to Szijjártó, the CoE had been about to adopt a resolution on Friday “which would have recognised Ukrainian President Zelensky’s peace plan as the only formula to consider and support”. “This is unaccpetable; others have also prepared peace plans that are no inferior to the Ukrainian president’s,” he said, adding that he had requested the other plans to be included, but the majority rejected the proposal. “Therefore I vetoed and no resolution was passed,” Szijjártó added.
The Council of Europe would have served as a “great platform” for brokering peace, but by excluding Russia, the opportunity “for us to confront them directly with our opinions” has been lost, the foreign minister said in his address to a meeting of his Council of Europe counterparts in Strasbourg on Friday, adding that such a course of action would have required “courage”.
Hungary, a country “living in the shadow of the war in Ukraine for more than two years now”, is committed to the cause of peace, Péter Szijjártó said, adding that saving lives was a top priority for the Hungarian government. “And the way to save lives … comes through a ceasefire and peace talks,” he said. “The last two years have brought evidence that there is no solution on the battlefield. What you have on the battlefield is dead people and destruction. And among the dead people there are many Hungarians.” He noted the ethnic Hungarian minority of Ukraine, many of whom had been sent to the front lines and were killed.
Szijjártó insisted that “none of the two parties can win this war, therefore we need to use … a diplomatic toolkit”, adding that Hungary was against “the over-politicisation of international organisations”.
The Council of Europe “would have served as a great platform for making attempts to make peace, but we have made a decision here and we have excluded Russia”, the minister said, adding that by doing so, the CoE had passed up the opportunity “to confront them directly with our opinions”. “And I would like to urge everyone not to continue committing this mistake,” Szijjártó said. He added that the suspension of Azerbaijan’s mandate in the parliamentary assembly had also been “a huge mistake”, and called on the body to restore the rights of the Azeri delegation.
Meanwhile, the minister noted the role of the CoE in protecting the rights of ethnic minorities and said he hoped that the EU’s new officials after the June 9 elections would also respect those rights.
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1 Comment
Fidesz is engaging in shameless scare mongering to frighten Europeans into abandoning Ukraine and allow Putin to roll over them.
Orban = Putin. Europeans need to defend themselves and Fidesz encourages abject cowardice.