Zelensky’s plan ‘terrifying’ – Orban
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said he’s terrified by the contents of Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s so-called ‘victory plan’ for the conflict with Russia.
Zelensky, who has been discussing his plan with Western leaders behind closed doors in recent weeks, finally revealed it to the public during a speech before Ukrainian MPs in the Verkhovna Rada on Wednesday.
His proposals involve an immediate invitation for Kiev to join NATO, the lifting of restrictions on the use of Western-supplied long-range weapons for strikes on internationally recognized Russian territory, as well as the deployment of “a comprehensive non-nuclear strategic deterrence package” on Ukrainian soil.
“What [Zelensky] outlined yesterday in the Ukrainian parliament is more than terrifying,” Orban said of the ‘victory plan,’ in a Facebook post on Thursday.
The Hungarian PM suggested that the EU, which has been providing Kiev with weapons and funds, has approached the conflict between Russia and Ukraine “with a poorly organized, poorly executed, poorly calculated strategy.”
“We are losing this war, so the strategy is not working. A change must be made,” he insisted.
“This does not mean that we need more wars, more dangerous weapons, and long-range weapons, but that we need to switch from a war strategy to a peace strategy. We need a ceasefire and peace talks,” Orban wrote.
The prime minister said during a meeting of EU leaders in Brussels later on Thursday that he would urge German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron to “start negotiating with the Russians as soon as possible on behalf of the entire EU.”
Zelensky has also arrived in the Belgian capital to sell his ‘victory plan’ to the bloc’s leaders. The scheme aims “to strengthen Ukraine” in order to reach a diplomatic solution to the conflict, he told journalists ahead of the meeting. “I think that this plan does not depend on Russian will, only on the will of our partners,” he claimed.
On Wednesday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova described Zelensky’s proposals as a “set of incoherent slogans,” saying it was not a ‘victory plan,’ but more of a “plan for the misfortune of Ukraine.”
Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov suggested that Zelensky’s scheme was merely a roadmap for the continuation of the conflict between Moscow and Kiev. Peace can only be achieved if the government in Kiev “sobers up” and acknowledges the roots of the problems that led to the fighting, he said.