Suspension of hostilities
What does Viktor Orbán’s surprise visit to Kyiv mean for the future of the war in Ukraine?

Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán made a one-day state visit to Kyiv on Tuesday, the day after his country assumed the rotating six-month presidency of the EU Council. Instead of travelling to the Ukrainian capital by train, as nearly all other world leaders before him had done, Orbán entered Ukraine in a bullet-proof motorcade via its border with Hungary in the Carpathian Mountains.
Instead of leading to a softening of the Hungarian position, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 was seen by Budapest as an opportunity worth exploiting.
“To speak in football terms, I think Orban’s visit was an attempt to win an away game.”










