Hungary’s seizure of a Ukrainian convoy carrying millions in cash has sharply ramped up international tensions, but the move is also deeply tied to domestic politics as the Budapest government fights for survival.
Adam Jasser, TVP World’s news director, told News in Depth that Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is trying to weaponize anti-Ukrainian sentiment ahead of elections that could see him removed from power.
“Hungary stopping a convoy delivering cash that Ukraine badly needs is clearly a hostile move,” Jasser said. Hostility towards Kyiv is a key pillar of Orbán’s new political narrative, he suggested.
“Migration used to give him a lot of mileage, but that issue has cooled down. Now he has found Ukraine as a way of trying to claw back some of the support.”
According to Ukrainian officials, Hungarian authorities detained seven bank employees traveling with a convoy carrying about $82 in cash and gold. Kyiv described the situation as “hostage taking,” while Budapest insisted the operation was part of a money-laundering investigation.
Zelenskyy’s ire
Orbán has been engaged in a war of words with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky over recent weeks, with the pair trading sharp public remarks over the state of the Druzhba pipeline, which supplies Hungary with Russian oil.
Jasser argued Zelenskyy may have inadvertently played into Orbán’s political strategy ahead of the election on April 12. “He should let these three or four weeks pass before the election and then try to reach some kind of understanding,” he said.
Reflecting on the Druzhba dispute, Jasser said the issue reflects a deeper political divide over Hungary’s continued reliance on Russian energy.
“Orbán had ample time to wean his country off Russian oil and gas, and he hasn’t done it,” he said. “Practically everyone else in Europe has done it.”