❓WHAT HAPPENED: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky issued a thinly veiled threat to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, saying he will give the populist leader’s address to the Ukrainian military if he blocks European Union (EU) funding for Ukraine.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
📍WHEN & WHERE: March 5, 2026; Kiev, Ukraine.
💬KEY QUOTE: “[W]e will simply give the address of that person to our Armed Forces—our guys can call him and speak to him in their own language.” – Volodymyr Zelensky
🎯IMPACT: The incident highlights the escalating tensions between Ukraine and Hungary, with Zelensky accused of imposing an “oil blockade” on Hungary and Orban threatening to block tens of billions of dollars in EU aid for Ukraine in return.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has issued a veiled threat to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban over a stalled European Union (EU) aid package worth tens of billions of dollars, suggesting Ukraine’s military will be given his address if he blocks the funds. This comes as Zelensky is accused of imposing an “oil blockade” on Hungary and Slovakia, landlocked countries that depend on supply routes passing from Russia through Ukraine for crude oil.
The dispute centers on a proposed €90 billion (~$105bn) EU loan intended to help fund Ukraine’s military and economic needs as the war with Russia continues. Zelensky underscored the urgency of approving the aid, saying: “We hope that one person in the EU [Orban] will not block the 90 billion euros—or at least the first tranche of it —so that Ukrainian soldiers receive the weapons they need. Otherwise, we will give the address of this person to our Armed Forces, to our guys. Let them call him and speak with him in their own language.”
Ukraine and Hungary are already at odds over the Druzhba pipeline, a major route carrying Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia. The pipeline has been shut by the Ukrainians, and Orbán has warned that Hungary will end the blockade “by force.”
Orbán has also expressed skepticism about continuing large-scale financial and military support for Ukraine. In one interview, he criticized Western spending on the war, stating: “We have burned already €185 billion, and… our intention is to burn even more. So we finance a country which has no chance to win the war.”
Budapest has also opposed Kiev’s bid to join the European Union. Orbán has argued that admitting Ukraine while it remains at war would risk drawing the EU directly into the conflict, warning: “The problem is the war; if we were to integrate Ukraine into the EU, we would integrate the war.”
Security tensions have added to the strain. Ukrainian authorities recently accused Hungary of running a spy network in the Transcarpathia region of western Ukraine, which has a sizable ethnic Hungarian minority. Hungary has rejected the allegations, while accusing the Ukrainian government of repressing the Hungarian minority and language.
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