Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjártó aided Putin and his oligarchs: leaked recording emerges – video

Péter Szijjártó, Hungary’s Foreign Minister, stands accused of leaking sensitive details from European Union decision-making processes. According to the Polish Prime Minister, this is common knowledge in Brussels, to the extent that Hungary is sometimes excluded from negotiations. A leaked recording has now surfaced, revealing two damning points: Szijjártó’s active role in politically assisting Putin-aligned Russian oligarchs, and his strikingly subservient tone when addressing Russia’s Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov.
Leaked recording details
Warsaw-based investigative outlet VSquare, which specialises in Central European affairs, released the audio this morning, dating it to a conversation on 30 August 2024 between Szijjártó and Lavrov. It was Lavrov who initiated the call, keen to inform his counterpart that Hungarian coverage dominated Russian front pages.
Szijjártó’s response was oddly defensive (“Did I say something wrong?”) but Lavrov reassured him, praising his pragmatic defence of Hungary’s interests. The Russian then cut to the chase: a request to remove Gulbahor Ismailova, sister of Alisher Usmanov, from the EU sanctions list at Usmanov’s behest. A close Putin associate with mining, industrial, media and telecoms interests, Usmanov’s fortune stands at USD 3.4 billion, per VSquare.

Szijjártó outlined in detail the steps he planned, jointly with Slovakia, to secure her delisting.
Subservient tone?
Listeners may note a stark contrast in demeanour. Lavrov speaks with cheerful yet measured authority, pausing for replies, while Szijjártó races ahead, interrupting and anticipating thoughts in a manner that many will perceive as obsequious, far from the poise of equal partners.
The recording’s later, unreleased portion reportedly features banter over Gabrielius Landsbergis, then Lithuania’s foreign minister, who claimed at an EU meeting that 12% of rockets striking Ukraine were EU-funded. Szijjártó countered that the true figure was worse, as not only Hungary and Slovakia but other states bought Russian oil, via India and Kazakhstan.
Check out the recording:
Shadow fleet intervention
VSquare also obtained another recording of Szijjártó pressing Russia’s Deputy Energy Minister Pavel Sorokin to exempt the Russian shadow fleet’s ships and firms from sanctions. Sorokin’s designated role under Putin includes evading EU measures.
In a 30 June 2025 exchange, Szijjártó lamented the EU withholding documents on 2Rivers, a Dubai-based Russian firm trading sanctioned oil, owing to no Hungarian link: another entity he sought to delist.

Sanctions package briefing
He went further, previewing the EU’s 18th sanctions package for Sorokin, boasting of having removed 72 Russian interests while 128 remained. Szijjártó solicited data from Sorokin to justify exemptions, admitting not all had Hungarian ties. VSquare deems this blatant favouritism to Moscow, devoid of national interest; he sought similar arguments for Russian banks on another occasion.
Limited impact unclear
The 18th package passed after weeks of Hungarian and Slovak blocking; 2Rivers was added, a blow to the shadow fleet. VSquare concedes Szijjártó’s precise influence remains opaque. Yet Usmanov’s sister was ultimately removed.
An EU diplomat told VSquare that Slovakia and Hungary secured deletions for political reasons, not legal ones, including a bid for Usmanov himself, backed by Turkey’s president, though Slovakia relented. Some 2,700 Russians remain sanctioned.

Szijjártó’s defence
The minister insists his public stance matches private words: for four years he has decried sanctions as a failure, “harming the EU more than Russia”. Hungary will never allow sanctions on those vital to its energy security, peace efforts, or lacking any rationale, and he will stick to that line.
Questions persist: how do concessions on the shadow fleet or Putin cronies serve Hungary, which buys only pipeline oil from Russia (none since 27 January via Druzhba)? Neither Lavrov, Szijjártó, nor Slovakia’s Robert Fico responded to VSquare.
If you missed our previous articles concerning the close Russia-Hungary ties:
- Russian disinformation network spreads fake assassination and coup claims about Orbán
- Russia might have been in EU discussions: Hungarian opposition leader accuses FM of ‘treason’






Everybody with an intact thought process knows what is going on and for patriotic Hungarians it is an absolutely disgusting betrayal of the natioin.. Szijjarto deserves prison and the same with the rest of them. The first warming of betrayal was the removal of the 1956 memorial from the front of Parliament. That told you exactly what was going on.
lets act like if we were surprised…. Hungary should just russia. Free energy for all its citizens and anti wester values.
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Telex English: “Once they had addressed the main purpose of the conversation, Lavrov and Szijjártó unanimously criticized EU countries supporting Ukraine and took aim at Josep Borrell, the European Union’s then High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy”. There is your Russian-Hungarian coordination on the Russian war against Ukraine attacking Europe’s security.
“Bravo Szijjártó, you doing a great job! Hairá Fidesz!”
Friendship – earned. Perhaps even get to move to Russia, if things get nasty?
https://dailynewshungary.com/hungarian-fm-szijjarto-receives-order-of-friendship-from-russian-fm-lavrov/