Hungary lifts block on Ukraine’s E.U. bid, but long timeline could put Kyiv at risk
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
Hungary agreed to drop its opposition to opening the formal access talks but is still opposed to the fast-track membership process that Ukraine says it needs as protection from Russia.
June 4, 2026 at 7:15 a.m. EDT
4 min/
Summary
Hungary's Prime Minister Peter Magyar, flanked by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, addresses the media at E.U. headquarters in Brussels on May 29. (Virginia Mayo/AP)
KYIV — Hungary has lifted its longtime opposition to Ukraine opening formal talks to join the European Union − offering a glimmer of hope to a country traumatized by war that sees membership as crucial to escaping the claws of Russia and securing a free, democratic future.
But even as Hungary lowered the roadblock imposed by then-Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who was voted out in April, his successor, Peter Magyar, said the country would continue to oppose a fast-track accession process sought by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Joining the E.U. can take decades as aspiring member countries work to overhaul to every aspect of their government and public administration to comply with European standards.
Ukraine also wants to join NATO, but with that path seemingly blocked by the United States − in part to assuage Russia, which is fiercely opposed to Ukraine entering the Western military alliance − Zelensky has said Ukraine must join the E.U. as soon as possible.
Magyar, however, said there would be no shortcuts.
“If Ukraine succeeds in closing all 33 accession chapters within the next 10 to 15 years, Hungary will support Ukraine’s accession, subject to a legally binding referendum,” he said in a statement.
Hungary agreed to drop its opposition to opening the formal accession talks after Kyiv and Budapest reached agreement to expand the rights of Ukraine’s ethnic Hungarian population — an issue that has complicated relations between the two countries.
Orban, while in 100,000, bolstered his popularity by claiming to defend the rights of ethnic Hungarians beyond his country’s borders.
The fate of Ukraine’s Hungarian community, which numbers more than and is concentrated in the southwestern Transcarpathia region, was a particular point of contention, which Orban used as justification to block numerous E.U. initiatives to aid Kyiv while it battled Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Late Wednesday, Magyar announced that the countries had reached a “comprehensive agreement” to expand “the linguistic, educational, cultural, and political rights” of Ukraine’s ethnic Hungarian community.
“In just three weeks, we have achieved what Viktor Orban and his government failed to achieve in ten years,” Magyar wrote on X.
Cyprus, which currently holds the E.U.’s rotating presidency, said it planned to move forward with the “formal opening” of the first stage of Ukraine’s formal membership talks, calling it a “significant milestone in their European integration path.”
The E.U.’s commissioner for enlargement, Marta Kos, meanwhile, called for accelerating talks with Ukraine and neighboring Moldova, saying that ethnic Hungarians living in Ukraine would be best-served by become E.U. citizens.
“This is the best way to ensure minority rights are respected,” Kos posted on social media.
Ukrainian officials sought to put the most positive spin on the developments despite Magyar’s suggestion of a 10- to 15-year horizon.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha thanked Hungary for its “constructive engagement.”
On Wednesday, NATO ambassadors from the alliance’s 32 member countries met in Kyiv for the first time to hold a session of the NATO-Ukraine Council, a group formed to aid Ukraine in its defense against Russia.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte directly addressed “young Russians and their families,” telling them that they were the victims of a “raw deal.
“Men like you who join the fight — you won’t be trained,” Rutte said during a news conference with Zelensky. “Equipment they’ll provide you with is substandard. There is a very high chance you’ll die or be wounded while you’re out there.”
And odds are that if you are wounded, you will be left to suffer in the mud and die,” Rutte said, adding that Russian forces were experiencing “absolutely staggering” losses. ...
David L. Stern has worked for news outlets in Russia, Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, the Middle East and Central Asia. He has lived in Ukraine since 2009, covering the 2014 Maidan revolution, war in the country’s east and now Russia’s 2022 invasion.follow on X@loydstern
Ukrainian and European officials say President Vladimir V. Putin has become emboldened by a lack of Western pushback. The police inspected the damage to a house caused by debris from a shot-down Russian drone in the village of Wyryki-Wola, eastern Poland on Wednesday. Credit... Wojtek Radwanski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images By Andrew E. Kramer Reporting from Kyiv, Ukraine The New York Times , Sept. 11, 2025 Updated 8:49 a.m. ET An American factory in western Ukraine. Two European diplomatic compounds and a key Ukrainian government building in Kyiv. And now Poland. Over a roughly three-week period, Russian drones and missiles have struck sites of increasing sensitivity for Ukraine and its Western allies, culminating in the volley of Russian drones that buzzed early Wednesday over Poland, a NATO country. For decades, American and European military planners feared something else: a bolt-from-the-blue assault, like an all-out nuclear strike, from the Soviet Union or ...
A bold Ukrainian operation in Kursk has humiliated Russian President Vladimir Putin and upended some of the logic of the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine. Column by Ishaan Tharoor The Washington Post , August 14, 2024 at 12:00 a.m. EDT; see also Ukrainian soldiers pose for a picture as they repair a military vehicle near the Russian border on Sunday. (Viacheslav Ratynskyi/Reuters) Russia’s Kursk oblast is no stranger to war. In medieval times, the district was overrun by the Mongol horde, and was claimed and ceded down the centuries by Eurasian empires. During World War II, the environs of the city of Kursk became the site of the greatest tank battle in history, as Nazi Germany suffered a grievous strategic defeat at the hands of the bloodied yet unbowed Soviet Union . This past week, Kursk has been the site of the first major invasion of Russian territory since then. This time, it’s not the Nazi war machine rolling in — no matter what Kremlin propagandists insi...
Comments
Post a Comment