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<https://www.intellinews.com/europe-s-troublemakers-meet-in-belgrade-382673/>  


Europe's troublemakers meet in Belgrade


By bne IntelliNews May 23, 2025

4–5 minutes

  _____  

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban met Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic in 
Belgrade on May 23, in a display of solidarity between two of Europe’s most 
defiant political figures.

The visit, part of a broader working mission by a Hungarian delegation, 
underscores a deepening strategic alignment between Hungary and Serbia, at a 
time of heightened geopolitical uncertainty in the Western Balkans.

The pair, known for their illiberal governance styles and independent foreign 
policies, held what Vucic described as “a full day of consultations” covering 
geopolitics, defence, economic cooperation and bilateral strategic coordination.

"Today we are conducting a strategic dialogue on the most important issues for 
our two countries," Vucic wrote on social media, hailing what he called the 
"best relations in Serbian-Hungarian history."

The meeting comes amid growing friction within the European Union over 
Hungary’s adversarial stance toward Brussels. Orban has long positioned himself 
as a contrarian within the bloc, while simultaneously championing Serbia’s bid 
for EU membership. Hungary remains one of Belgrade’s most vocal advocates in 
Brussels, most recently supporting Serbia’s calls for the United States to 
delay sanctions on the majority-Russian-owned oil company NIS, citing concerns 
over energy security in the region.

Orban and Vucic have repeatedly demonstrated their mutual political affinity, 
maintaining close ties with Moscow and Beijing even as much of Europe seeks to 
recalibrate its dependencies following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Both men 
have rejected the mainstream EU consensus on several key issues, fostering a 
shared image as “sovereignist” leaders charting independent foreign policy 
paths.

Their alignment was starkly illustrated last year when Hungary stood alone 
among EU member states in voting against a United Nations General Assembly 
resolution on the 1995 Srebrenica genocide – siding with Serbia and the Bosnian 
Serb leadership in a move that drew condemnation from Western capitals.

The Belgrade talks follow an April announcement by Vucic of plans to build a 
full-fledged military alliance between the two countries. This followed the 
signing of a strategic defence partnership and came in response to a trilateral 
pact between Albania, Croatia and Kosovo – an agreement Serbia sharply 
criticised as destabilising. Vucic warned at the time that the pact could 
trigger an arms race in the Balkans.

The Hungarian leader, for his part, has maintained that Serbia’s accession to 
the EU remains critical for regional stability and has repeatedly called for an 
accelerated path for Belgrade’s membership. Orban’s strong advocacy has been 
reciprocated by Vucic, who described his counterpart on Friday as "a great 
friend" and a key partner in Serbia’s European ambitions.

As the EU's influence in the Western Balkans is tested by growing geopolitical 
competition from Russia and China, the Orban-Vucic axis is emerging as a 
significant counterweight to pro-Western currents in the region – one that 
could test the EU’s unity and undermine its influence in its immediate 
neighbourhood.

 

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