Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has called Western European officials “fanatics” incapable of rational dialogue

Hungary will continue importing Russian oil and gas, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has said, rejecting pressure from Washington and Brussels for a clean break from Moscow’s energy supplies.

Szijjarto made the comments in an interview with The Guardian published on Tuesday on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York. For landlocked Hungary, he said, the issue of energy security is a matter of physical infrastructure – pipelines, refineries and existing contracts – that limit where it can source energy.

“We can’t ensure the safe supply for our country without Russian oil or gas sources,” he said. “It can be nice to dream about buying oil and gas from somewhere else … but we can only buy from where we have infrastructure.”




In recent weeks, the US has increasingly pushed its European NATO partners to stop purchasing Russian energy and to introduce secondary tariffs on India and China, while refusing to impose any new sanctions unilaterally. President Donald Trump mocked them in his UNGA address on Tuesday, claiming “some in NATO are funding the war against themselves.”

Hungary’s state-owned MOL Group imports about five million tonnes of crude annually via the Druzhba pipeline, which also supplies Slovakia. The route has come under direct threat in recent months, with Ukrainian forces striking pumping stations and other facilities along the line, causing temporary disruptions to shipments.




The European Commission has set a goal of phasing out Russian fossil fuels by 2027. Brussels has reportedly included 12 Chinese and three Indian entities in its 19th sanctions package, which must be unanimously approved before being adopted.

Brussels has also been weighing separate trade measures that could curtail oil deliveries through the Druzhba pipeline, even without unanimous consent, effectively allowing other EU members to outvote Hungary and Slovakia, according to Bloomberg. 

When asked about mounting European pressure, Szijjarto said it was “totally impossible to carry out a fact-based, rational dialogue based on common sense” with Western officials, whom he described as “fanatics.”

READ MORE:
EU spent €8.7 billion on Russian imports in three months – German data

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, one of Trump’s closest allies in Europe, has argued that continuing Russian supplies is essential to protect households and industry. He has maintained relations with Russia and often criticized Western military support for Ukraine, even as most EU states have cut ties since 2022.

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