http://rt.com/op-edge/203151-hungary-independent-politics-west/
The bullying of Hungary – the country that dared to disobey the US and EU
</op-edge/authors/neil-clark/>

Neil Clark is a journalist, writer and broadcaster. His award winning blog
can be found at www.neilclark66.blogspot.com. Follow him on Twitter
<https://twitter.com/NeilClark66>
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Published time: November 07, 2014 12:53
[image: Reuters / Karoly Arvai]

Reuters / Karoly Arvai
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EU </tags/eu/>, Economy </tags/economy/>, Election </tags/election/>, Energy
</tags/energy/>, Europe </tags/europe/>, Finance </tags/finance/>, Gas
</tags/gas/>, History </tags/history/>, Human rights </tags/human-rights/>,
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25 years ago, Hungary was being toasted in the West for opening its border
with Austria to East Germans, in a move which led to the fall of the Berlin
Wall. Now the Western elites are not happy with Budapest which they
consider far too independent.

The refusal of Prime Minister Viktor Orban and his ruling Fidesz party to
join the new US and EU Cold War against Russia, which has seen the
Hungarian parliament approving a law to build the South Stream gas pipeline
without the approval of the European Union, in addition to the populist
economic policies Fidesz has adopted against the largely foreign owned
banks and energy companies, has been met with an angry response from
Washington and Brussels.

Hungarian officials have been banned from entering the US, while the
European Commission has demanded that the Hungarians explain their decision
to go ahead with South Stream. That’s on top of the European Commission
launching legal action against the Hungarian government for its law
restricting the rights of foreigners to buy agricultural land.

The bullying of Hungary hasn’t made many headlines because it’s so-called
*“democrats”* from the West who have been doing the bullying.

Viktor Orban is not a communist, he is a nationally-minded conservative who
was an anti-communist activist in the late 1980s, but the attacks on him
and his government demonstrate that it doesn’t matter what label you go
under - if you don’t do exactly what Uncle Sam and the Euro-elite tell you
to do - your country will come under great pressure to conform. And all of
course in the name of *“freedom”* and *“democracy.”*

Fidesz has been upsetting some powerful people in the West ever since
returning to power in 2010. The previous *“Socialist”*-led administration
was hugely popular in the West because it did everything Washington and
Brussels and the international banking set wanted. It imposed austerity on
ordinary people, it privatized large sections of the economy, and it took
out an unnecessary IMF loan. Ironically, the conservative-minded Fidesz
party has proved to be much better socialists in power than the
big-business and banker friendly *“Socialists”* they replaced.

One of the first things that Fidesz and its coalition allies, the Christian
Democratic People’s Party, (KDNP) did was to introduce an $855m bank tax -
the highest such tax in Europe - a measure which had the financial elite
foaming at the mouth.

Orban clashed with the IMF too, with his government rejecting new loan
terms in 2012, and paying off early a loan taken out by the previous
government, to reduce interest payments.
[image: Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban (Reuters / Bernadett Szabo)]

Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban (Reuters / Bernadett Szabo)



In 2013, Orban took on the foreign-owned energy giants with his government
imposing cuts of over 20% on bills. Neoliberals expressed their outrage at
such *“interventionist”*policies, but under Orban, the economy has
improved. Although it’s true that many still look back nostalgically to the
days of *“goulash communism”* in the 1970s and 80s when there were jobs for
all and food on the table for everyone. Unemployment fell to 7.4 percent in
the third-quarter of this year; it was around 11 percent when Fidesz took
power, while real wages rose by 2.9 percent in the year up to July.

The man his enemies called the *“Viktator,”* has shown that he will pursue
whatever economic policies he believes are in his country’s national
interest, regardless of the opinions of the western elite who want the
Hungarian economy to be geared to their needs.

His refusal to scrap his country’s bank tax is one example; the closer
commercial links with Russia are another. Russia is Hungary’s third biggest
trading partner and ties between the two countries have strengthened in the
last couple of years, to the consternation of western Russophobes. In
April, a deal was struck for Moscow to loan Hungary €10 billion to help
upgrade its nuclear plant at Paks.

Orban’s policy of improving trade and business links with Russia, while
staying a member of the EU and NATO, has however been put under increasing
strain by the new hostile policy towards Moscow from Washington and
Brussels.

Orban again, has annoyed the West by sticking up for Hungary’s own
interests. In May he faced attack when he had the temerity to speak up for
the rights of the 200,000 strong Hungarian community living in
Ukraine.*”Ukraine
can neither be stable, nor democratic, if it does not give its minorities,
including Hungarians, their due. That is dual citizenship, collective
rights and autonomy.”* Hungary’s Ambassador was summoned to the Foreign
Ministry in Kiev. Donald Tusk, Prime Minister of Poland, the US’s most
obedient lapdog in Eastern Europe, called Orban’s comments *“unfortunate
and disturbing”* as if it was anything to do with him or his country.

In August, Orban accurately described
<http://rt.com/business/180564-eu-russia-sanctions-hungary/> the sanctions
policy of the West towards Russia as like *“shooting oneself in the
foot.”**“The
EU should not only compensate producers somehow, be they Polish, Slovak,
Hungarian or Greek, who now have to suffer losses, but the entire sanctions
policy should be reconsidered,”* Orban said.

In October, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto also questioned the
sanctions on Russia, revealing that his country is losing 50 million
forints a day due to the policy
<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3af681ee-550f-11e4-b616-00144feab7de.html#axzz3IIgfVnC5>
.

Hungary has made its position clear, but for daring to question EU and US
policy, and for its rapprochement with Moscow, the country has been
punished.

It’s democratically elected civilian government which enjoys high levels of
public support, has ludicrously - and obscenely - been likened to military
governments which have massacred their opponents. *"From Hungary to Egypt,
endless regulations and overt intimidation increasingly target civil
society,"* declared US President Barack Obama in September.

Last month there was another salvo fired at Hungary - it was announced that
the US had banned six unnamed Hungarian government officials from entering
America, citing concerns over corruption- without the US providing any
proof of the corruption.
[image: RIA Novosti / Ramil Sitdikov]

RIA Novosti / Ramil Sitdikov

*"At a certain point, the situation, if it continues this way, will
deteriorate to the extent where it is impossible to work together as an
ally,"* warned the Charge D’Affaires of the US Embassy in Budapest, Andre
Goodfriend. The decision and the failure to provide any evidence,
understandably caused outrage in Hungary. *“The government of Hungary is
somewhat baffled at the events that have unfolded because this is not the
way friends deal with issues,"* said Janos Lazar, Orban‘s chief of staff.

The timing of the ban has to be noted, coming after the Hungarian
government had criticized the sanctions on Russia and just before the
national Parliament was due to vote on the South Stream pipeline. The
pipeline, which would allow gas to be transported from Russia via the Black
Sea and the Balkans to south and central Europe without passing through
Ukraine, is a project which Russophobes in the West want cancelled.

*"I am inclined to think that it is a punishment for the fact that we talk
to Russia,"* said Gabor Stier, the head foreign policy editor of the
leading Hungarian newspaper Magyar Nemzet.

*"America thinks that we are corrupt, but we are a sovereign state, and it
is our business. Many people in the United States do not like that Viktor
Orban is very independent…..Corruption is just an excuse."*

It’s hard to disagree with Stier’s conclusions
<http://en.ria.ru/analysis/20141022/194435162/US-Visa-Ban-Punishes-Hungary-for-Relations-With-Russia-Expert.html>.
Of course, there is corruption in Hungary, as there is in every country,
but it pales in comparison with some countries who are faithful US allies
and who Washington never criticizes. The 2013 Corruption Perceptions Index
<http://www.transparency.org/cpi2013/results> compiled by Transparency
International, reveals that Latvia, the Czech Republic, Croatia, Romania,
Bulgaria and Bosnia-Herzegovina are all below Hungary, as indeed is Italy.
Yet it’s Hungarian officials that the US is banning.

True to form, the attacks on Orban and his government in the Western media
have chimed with the political attacks. *‘Is Hungary, the EU’s only
dictatorship?’* asked Bloomberg View in April. The BBC ran a hostile piece
on Orban and Fidesz in October entitled Cracks Emerge in leading party, and
which referred to *“government corruption”* and *“the playboy lifestyle of
numerous party officials.”*

The piece looked forward to the end
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-29740030> of Fidesz rule.

While earlier this week, the New York Times published an OpEd by Kati
Marton, whose late husband Richard Holbrooke, was a leading US diplomat,
entitled Hungary’s Authoritarian Descent. You’d never guess that the
Hungarian government wasn’t the flavor of the month in the West would you?
[image: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, left, and Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orban at their meeting in Budapest (RIA Novosti / Eduard
Pesov)]

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, left, and Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban at their meeting in Budapest (RIA Novosti / Eduard Pesov)

The question which has to be asked is: will Hungary be the next country to
be the target of a US/EU sponsored regime change?

We all know what happened to the last Viktor who refused to sever links
with Russia. Will Orban suffer the same fate as Ukraine’s Yanukovich? There
are good reasons for believing that he won’t.

Fidesz did make a mistake by announcing the introduction of a new internet
tax last month, which brought thousands onto the streets to protest but
they have since dropped the plans and the problem for the US and EU is that
Orban and his government remain too popular. In October’s local elections
Fidesz won 19 of Hungary’s 21 larger towns and cities, including the
capital city Budapest, not bad for a party that‘s been in power since May
2010.

Orban’s brand of economic populism, combined with moderate nationalism,
goes down well in a country where people remember just how awful things
were when the neoliberal *“Socialists”* were in power. His style of
leadership may be authoritarian, but Hungarians prefer having a leader who
has cut fuel bills and reduced unemployment to one who mouths platitudes
about *“liberal democracy”* but who imposed harsh austerity measures and
leaves them unable to afford the daily essentials.

Moreover Hungary, is already a member of the EU and NATO unlike Ukraine
under Yanukovich and isn't about to leave either soon. On a recent visit to
America Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto told the US TODAY newspaper *“US
is our friend, US is our closest ally.”* The US clearly wants more from
Hungary than just words, but while both Washington and Brussels would like
to see a more obedient government in Budapest, the *“liberal”* and
faux-left parties they support simply don't have enough popular support for
the reasons outlined above. And things would be even worse for the West if
the radical nationalist party Jobbik, the third largest party in
Parliament, and which made gains in October’s local elections, came to
power- or if there was a genuine socialist/communist revival in the
country. The fact is that Orban is in a very strong position and he knows
it. That’s why he feels able to face down the threats from abroad and
maintain a level of independence even though total independence is
impossible within the EU and NATO.

We can expect the attacks on Orban and his government to intensify but the
more the West attacks, the more popular Orban, who is able to present
himself as the defender of Hungary’s national interests, becomes.

Hungary gave the West everything it wanted in 1989, and, as I pointed out
here <http://www.theweek.co.uk/politics/19387/hungary-and-great-myth-1989>,
its *“reform”* communist leadership was richly rewarded. But in 2014 it’s a
very different story. In the interests of democracy and small countries
standing up to bullying by powerful elites, long may Hungary’s spirited
defiance continue.

Hajra, magyarok! Hajra Magyarorszag!

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely
those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
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