washingtonexaminer.com<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-america/courage-strength-optimism/4486941/hungary-slovakia-serbia-chose-tehran-over-trump/>
Hungary, Slovakia, and Serbia chose Tehran over Trump
Ivana Stradner
5–6 minutes
________________________________

The leaders of Slovakia<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/tag/slovakia/>, 
Hungary<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/tag/hungary/>, and 
Serbia<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/tag/serbia/> have long touted their 
loyalty to President Donald 
Trump<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/tag/donald-trump/>, courting 
Washington’s conservative wing. But when Trump launched his war with 
Iran<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/tag/iran/>, the mask came off.

Trump has 
backed<https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/trump-committed-hungarian-pm-orbans-success-says-rubio-2026-02-16/>
 Prime Minister Viktor 
Orban<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/tag/viktor-orban/> to the hilt as the 
Hungarian strongman seeks to cling to power in an upcoming election. But that 
didn’t stop Orban from quickly raising concerns about Trump’s war. Within 
hours, he raised Hungary’s terrorist threat 
level<https://x.com/PM_ViktorOrban/status/2027812200522338594>, warning that a 
prolonged Middle East conflict could trigger new waves of migration from Iran 
through Turkey and the Balkans. “Hungary must prepare and make sure the dam 
holds,” Orban 
emphasized<https://rmx.news/article/could-the-war-in-iran-spark-a-2016-style-migration-crisis-hungarys-pm-orban-warns-of-a-worst-case-scenario/>.

Orban also 
complained<https://dailynewshungary.com/orban-ukraine-middle-east-v4/> about 
the conflict’s impact on Hungary’s energy security, despite the fact that Trump 
had granted Orban a sanctions 
exemption<https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp85dvnkpv4o> so Hungary could keep 
buying Russian oil. The U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, he noted, add a 
“double danger” to an already strained energy sector, halting oil flows from 
Iran and LNG deliveries from Qatar while prices climb. The Hungarian leader 
discussed this further in a phone call 
<https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/putin-orb-n-discuss-drastically-134407488.html>
 with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who 
thanked<https://euobserver.com/205394/putin-thanks-orban-for-eu-veto-amid-iran-war-nightmare-for-kyiv/>
 him for his “principled” and “sovereign” foreign policy.

Prior to the war, Hungary had maintained friendly relations with Iran, with 
officials from both countries describing their diplomatic ties as being on the 
“right 
track<https://en.irna.ir/news/85395600/Iran-Hungary-relations-on-right-track-Amirabdollahian>.”
 Economic cooperation forms a key pillar of this relationship. The two 
countries hold Joint Economic Committee meetings and, in 2024, 
signed<https://hungarytoday.hu/cooperation-agreement-with-iran-opens-up-new-trade-opportunities/#:~:text=MTI%2DHungary%20Today%202024.02.,the%20Hungarian%2DIranian%20Business%20Forum.>
 a memorandum of understanding aimed at facilitating trade and investment. 
Cultural and academic links are also expanding. In 2025, the countries 
signed<https://caspianpost.com/iran/iran-and-hungary-sign-educational-cooperation-agreement>
 an educational cooperation MOU covering science, technology, medicine, and 
agriculture.

Turning to Slovakia, Prime Minister Robert Fico was more strident in his 
criticism. “The big and powerful do whatever they want,” the Slovakian leader 
lamented<https://www.viory.video/en/videos/a3144_28022026/not-as-easy-a-nut-to-crack-as-venezuela-fico-warns-us-of-total-breakdown-of-world-order-over-iran-attack-with-eu-negligible->,
 warning that the world order is in “total breakdown.” After Iran retaliated to 
the U.S.-Israeli attack by launching missiles and drones at other Middle 
Eastern countries, Fico 
excused<https://x.com/RobertFicoSVK/status/2027823685621670130> the Iranian 
response as “natural.” Never mind the fact that prior to the war, in February, 
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio met Fico and 
pledged<https://x.com/SecRubio/status/2023074595411317208> to “build on our 
strong partnership with Slovakia.”

Like Hungary, Slovakia has pursued<https://www.azernews.az/region/193945.html> 
economic engagement with Iran, including energy, medicine, and agriculture. In 
2025, Iranian and Slovak deputy foreign ministers held 
talks<https://en.irna.ir/news/85799057/Senior-Iranian-and-Slovak-officials-discuss-bilateral-ties-and>
 in Bratislava, covering cooperation in the political, economic, cultural, 
academic, and consular fields. The Iran Chamber of Commerce proposed forming a 
joint trade 
committee<https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/511897/ICCIMA-proposes-joint-trade-committee-with-Slovakia>
 with Slovakia to deepen economic collaboration.

Finally, Serbia stands out as Tehran’s closest European partner. Prior to the 
war, Rubio 
met<https://www.state.gov/releases/office-of-the-spokesperson/2025/09/secretary-rubios-meeting-with-serbian-president-vucic>
 with Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic to strengthen the partnership through 
a strategic dialogue. Also, the U.S. Treasury Department 
extended<https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/us-grants-sanctions-waiver-serbias-russia-owned-nis-oil-firm-until-march-20-2026-02-20/>
 a sanctions waiver for the Petroleum Industry of Serbia, where Russia’s 
Gazprom and Gazprom Neft own more than half the shares, allowing the Balkan 
country to continue importing crude oil. The United States originally imposed 
sanctions as part of broader measures targeting Russia’s energy sector in 
response to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

But when Trump launched his operation against Iran, Vucic also did not provide 
his support to Washington. Instead, he 
whined<https://www.bta.bg/en/news/balkans/1074449-vucic-middle-east-conflict-marks-end-of-respect-for-international-law-not-wwii>
 about the end of “international law.” Vucic then compared the U.S. strikes on 
Iran with the NATO intervention against Yugoslavia, an operation which he 
claimed was not truly intended to halt Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic’s 
ethnic cleansing of Kosovar Albanians but rather for “regime change.”

Belgrade has repeatedly expressed gratitude for Iran’s 
stance<https://www.mfa.gov.rs/en/press-service/news/dacic-serbia-grateful-iran-its-position-kosovo>
 on Kosovo, a core foreign policy issue for Serbia, as Tehran continues to 
refuse to recognize Kosovo’s independence. In 2025, Serbian and Iranian foreign 
ministers 
held<https://msp.rs/en/press-service/news/bilateral-political-consultations-between-ministries-foreign-affairs-serbia-and-iran>
 bilateral political consultations to deepen cooperation. That same year, 
Serbia and Iran 
signed<https://www.srbija.gov.rs/vest/en/244309/memorandum-of-cooperation-in-ict-signed-with-iran.php>
 a memorandum of understanding on information security and the development of 
artificial intelligence, demonstrating that their partnership is evolving 
beyond traditional diplomacy into security arenas.

ALL POLITICS IS LOCAL — EVEN IN 
WAR<https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/in_focus/4485771/all-politics-is-local-even-in-war/>

For years, these self-described allies of Trump have sought to cozy up to the 
president when it suited them. But when the chips are down, their true colors 
come out, and their loyalty fades.

Trump would do well to remember that the next time they ask him for a favor.

-- 
http:www.antic.org
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