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Poland invited Hungary to leave the EU and NATO

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Poland invited Hungary to leave the European Union and the North Atlantic Alliance for the sake of an alliance with Russia.

This proposal was made by Deputy Foreign Minister of Poland Teofil Bartoszewski, reacting to a statement by the head of the Hungarian government, Viktor Orban, about Warsaw’s hypocritical policy towards Russia.

His statement leads.

What Orban said about Polish politics

On July 27, the Prime Minister of Hungary, in his speech at the Baile Tusznad Summer University in Romania, condemned Poland’s hypocritical policy towards Russia.

According to Orban, Warsaw continues to do business with companies from Russia through intermediaries.

The Hungarian prime minister also accused Warsaw of changing the balance of power in Europe by weakening the Germany-France axis in favor of a new configuration: Great Britain, Poland, Ukraine, the Scandinavian countries and the Baltic countries.

According to the head of the Hungarian government, this weakens the Visegrad Group, which includes Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

How the Polish Foreign Ministry proposed Hungary to leave the European Union and NATO

The deputy head of the Polish Foreign Ministry said that he does not quite understand why Hungary remains in organizations that it does not like and allegedly treats it poorly.

Why doesn’t Orbán form an alliance with Putin? – suggested the deputy minister, calling Orban’s policies anti-Polish, anti-European and anti-Ukrainian.

Bartoshevsky also said that Hungary, not Poland, does business with Russia.

Hungary’s reaction to Poland’s proposal to leave the EU and NATO

In response to Bartoszewski’s statement, the head of Hungarian diplomacy, Peter Szijjártó, wrote on social networks that Poland accuses Hungary of importing Russian oil, but is itself on the list of its recipients.

He noted that there is nothing wrong with this as energy supply is based on physical needs.

But if this is so, then there is no need to be a hypocrite and shift the blame to otherssaid the head of the Hungarian Foreign Ministry.

Szijjártó added that Hungary has long tried to maintain fraternal relations with Poland, but its patience is already full.

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Vadim M
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