EU Commission demands clarification and is concerned about Hungarian FM Szijjártó’s ‘Russia scandal’

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Hungary’s foreign minister has denied allegations that for years he shared confidential EU information with Russia, calling the reports “fake” and “lies.”

FM Szijjártó talks about Ukrainian propaganda

“Fake news as always,” Péter Szijjártó wrote Sunday on US social media platform X. “You are telling lies in order to support Tisza Party to have a pro-(Ukraine) war puppet government in Hungary,” he added, referring to the main opposition party ahead of the country’s April 12 parliamentary elections. He said the allegations were part of “Ukrainian propaganda” aimed at supporting the opposition and influencing the election outcome.

putin szijjártó hungary moscow russia
Szijjártó in Moscow earlier this March. Photo: Facebook/Szijjártó

A story in The Washington Post, cited by multiple European outlets, said that Szijjártó regularly briefed Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on closed-door discussions held during EU Council meetings. The report claimed Szijjártó contacted his Russian counterpart during breaks at summits to relay details and suggest possible courses of action, the Turkish news agency Anadolu wrote.

Citing an unnamed European security official, the report said that “every single EU meeting for years has basically had Moscow behind the table,” raising concerns over potential breaches of trust within the bloc.

EU calls claims ‘greatly concerning’

Poland’s prime minister said the allegations came as no surprise. “We’ve had our suspicions about that for a long time,” said Donald Tusk. “That’s one reason why I take the floor only when strictly necessary and say just as much as necessary.”

Polish President Nawrocki – a political opponent of PM Tusk – is currently in Budapest:

Radoslaw Sikorski, Poland’s foreign minister, suggested the claims could explain longstanding concerns about information leaks within EU institutions. The controversy also spilled into Hungary’s domestic political arena. On US social media platform Facebook, opposition leader Peter Magyar called the alleged sharing of confidential information “pure treason,” accusing Szijjarto of betraying both Hungary and Europe.

The EU wants clarifications

The EU also called on Hungary to provide clarifications on the allegations, warning that trust among member states is essential for the block to work properly. EU Commission spokesperson Anita Hipper called the allegations “greatly concerning.” “For now, we are expecting the clarifications, and this is where we are,” she said, declining to comment on possible next steps.

False flag attempt to assassinate PM Orbán?

The report also alleged that Russia’s foreign intelligence service (SVR) had proposed staging a false flag attempt to assassinate Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán to boost his chances in next month’s vote, citing an internal intelligence document reviewed by a European service.

Hungary is set to hold parliamentary elections on April 12, with opinion polls indicating a lead for opposition figure Magyar over Orbán’s long-ruling Fidesz party.

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Featured image: Ursula von der Leyen EC head. Source: Anadolu

5 Comments

  1. Mr. Szijjártó has visited Moscow 16 times since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. His most recent trip was on 4 March, 2026 when he met Mr. Putin at the Kremlin.

    In the meantime, he contradicted his own Politicians cries of “Fake News!” by acknowledging he regularly contacted Mr. Lavrov, during private EU meetings on foreign affairs.

    A BFF indeed: https://dailynewshungary.com/putin-awards-order-of-friendship-to-the-hungarian-foreign-minister/

    Facts speak volumes, right?

    • My Dear Norbert – do you think that the Hungarian Left is going to convince their fellow Hungarians to vote for Tisza because the Fidesz Administration is on good terms with Russia?

  2. The Foreign Minister puts up a pretty “shaggy defense” for his actions, doesn’t he. “Gaslighting” in the purest sense of the word. After the elections, he may just make another trip to Moscow…. with a one-way ticket.

  3. This is nothing more than an election tactic.

    Everyone knows that Hungary, unlike most of the EU member states, has good relations with Russia.

    • what is the goal of gossip with russian politicians about what is happening on the EU meetings? This does not have anything to do with “Foreign diplomacy” but with national interest. Hungary just should leave and join russia. they will give free energy and another oppressive salute just like in 1956

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