EU leaders at summit face challenge from Orban over promises to Ukraine
The challenge comes at an especially dire time for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
EU leaders have struggled at the start of a two-day summit to keep their two most elementary promises to Ukraine intact – to give it the money and wherewithal to stave off the Russian invasion and maintain its hope that one day it will be able to join the wealthy bloc.
And stunningly, the threat to that commitment does not come from outside, but from within, from increasingly recalcitrant member Hungary.
The vision of its prime minister, Viktor Orban, heartily shaking hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin two months ago still hung heavy over the summit.
Mr Orban came into the summit vowing to both block the plans by his 26 fellow leaders to officially declare that membership negotiations with Ukraine can start, and more pressingly, deny Kyiv 50 billion euros in financial aid that the country dearly needs to stay afloat.
The challenge comes at an especially dire time for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, straight off a trip to Washington where his pleas for more aid from the US Congress fell on deaf ears.
“Ukraine will not stand without supports and ongoing support from both the European Union and the US,” said Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar. Barring that, he added “well then, Putin will win”.
Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda said the decision on the financial aid had to be taken at the summit, “because Ukraine is not fighting tomorrow. Ukraine is fighting right now”.
The urgency to find a solution is matched only by the potential blow to the EU’s credibility, Mr Zelensky said in a video address to the leaders.
“Nobody wants Europe to be seen as untrustworthy. Or as unable to take decisions it prepared itself,” he said.
“Whatever it takes” had been the relentless mantra of the EU in pledging its relentless support, leaders dressed up in the yellow and sky-blue coluors of Ukraine, and countless speeches ending with the rallying cry “Slava Ukraini!” — “Glory to Ukraine!”
The EU, a group of 27 nations which still cherish their independence on strategic and foreign affairs issues, works by unanimity on most issues relating to Ukraine, and now Mr Orban is seen by many as Mr Putin’s foot in the summit door, Mr Putin’s wrecking ball to demolish EU support for Mr Zelensky.
Even ahead of the summit, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz had already taken Mr Orban aside in an attempt to make him change his mind.
“It is important that a clear signal of support be sent here – a signal directed to the courageous citizens of Ukraine, who are defending their country, but a signal also directed to the Russian president,” said Mr Scholz.
Mr Orban has been at odds with his fellow EU leaders for years, ranging from fights over Covid-19 recovery money to his declining respect for the western democratic principles that are the essence of the EU.
It could come in handy over the next days.
“We should be clear, this is not a Hungarian bazaar where anything can be traded for something else. This is at a decisive moment, where we need to show that we continue to support Ukraine in full unity,” Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said on the eve of the summit.
The EU relented on Wednesday and granted Hungary access to more than 10 billions euros in frozen funds after its commission blocked substantial amounts of money out of concern that democratic backsliding by Mr Orban could put the bloc’s principles at risk.
If Mr Orban still refuses to back the Ukraine aid, the high-level official said, “we can also proceed at 26. It will be more complicated but if we have to, we will absolutely do so”.
Mr Orban has complained of corruption in Ukraine and has demanded a “strategic discussion” on the country’s future in Europe as the war with Russia bogs down and concerns mount about what kind of administration might emerge in Washington after the US elections in a year.
Speaking to politicians in Hungary’s parliament on Wednesday, Mr Orban said the time for bringing Ukraine into the EU had “not yet come”, and the development of a strategic partnership with Kyiv should be a prerequisite for beginning membership talks.
“We are interested in a peaceful and prosperous Ukraine, but this requires the establishment of peace as quickly as possible, and a deliberate deepening of the strategic partnership,” Mr Orban said, adding that such a process could take “a number of years”.