Orban names first step to peace in Ukraine
The parties should agree to a ceasefire before hammering out a precise peace plan, the Hungarian leader said
Moscow and Kiev should agree to a ceasefire before drafting a detailed peace plan, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said. Speaking at an international economic conference in Cernobbio, Italy on Friday, he stressed that both sides would have to eventually come to the negotiating table.
For any attempts at mediation to bear fruit, there needs to be communication with both Russia and Ukraine, Orban said. “If we wait for a peace plan that is accepted by both sides, there will never be peace – because the first step is not a peace plan. The first step is a ceasefire,” he noted.
“You need communication first, then a ceasefire, and then you can negotiate a peace plan,” Orban stressed.
In June, Switzerland hosted a Ukraine peace conference, to which Russia was not invited. The event was mostly centered around Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s ‘peace formula,’ which stipulates that Russia must withdraw its forces from all territory claimed by Ukraine, a plan Moscow has already dismissed as “detached from reality.”
After Hungary took over the rotating presidency of the EU in June, Orban visited Kiev, Moscow, Beijing and Washington as part of his “peace mission” tour. His trip to Moscow and the meeting with Russia President Vladimir Putin ruffled some feathers in Brussels, however, with EU officials distancing themselves from the endeavor.
Budapest has long argued for prioritizing a diplomatic resolution of the conflict, rather than supplying Kiev with weapons. Orban is a staunch opponent of military aid to Ukraine who has vowed not to drag Hungary into a full-blown war with Russia.
The peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine broke down in the spring of 2022, with both sides accusing each other of making unrealistic demands. According to Putin, the negotiators from Kiev had initially agreed to transform Ukraine into a neutral country and restrict the size of its military but later abruptly abandoned the talks.
Putin reiterated on Thursday that Ukraine’s Western backers were hellbent on making Kiev “fight to the last Ukrainian” with the goal of inflicting “a strategic defeat” on Moscow. He stressed that any future negotiations should be based on the documents drafted during the talks in Istanbul in 2022.
Zelensky, meanwhile, has urged the West to continue pressuring Russia into accepting Kiev’s terms. Speaking at a meeting with US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin at Ramstein Air Base in Germany on Friday, he insisted that Moscow must be forced to agree to a “real peace” as early as this fall.
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