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Battle for Hungary: Could an Orban win trigger ‘Maidan on steroids’? Talk of a coup is rising, but the Ukraine playbook might not translate to Hungarian

   by RT newsroom, a team of multi-lingual journalists with over a decade of experience in Russian and international reporting, delivering original research and insights often missing from mainstream coverage

Polls ahead of the Hungarian elections point to an opposition victory, but players behind the scenes expect Prime Minister Viktor Orban to come out on top. Others say it’s a scenario ripe for a Kiev-style ‘color revolution’.

With two weeks to go until Hungary’s parliamentary elections, Orban is facing the most credible threat to his power yet. Opposition leader Peter Magyar’s Tisza party is currently leading Orban’s Fidesz by 15 points, according to an aggregate of polls compiled by Politico. When looking at pollsters linked to Tisza or funded by the EU, the results are even more stark. A poll by the opposition-linked Median, for example, shows Tisza a whole 23 points ahead of Fidesz, at 58-35%.

However, Politico has also reported that “many” EU leaders secretly believe an Orban victory is “likely.” Hungarian EU Affairs Minister Janos Boka thinks that the disparity between public surveys and private sentiment is no accident, and that by skewing polls, Magyar and his allies in Brussels are “building the narrative that if they lose the election, then this is an illegitimate result.”

Notorious intervention hawk Michael Weiss put Boka’s worries into words last week. “If Orban tries to steal this – and he almost certainly will – it’ll be Euromaidan on steroids in an EU/NATO country. Watch closely, America,” he warned in a post on X.

Weiss, who previously ran a Ukraine regime change outfit he claimed was journalism, was referring to the post-election coup that toppled a democratically elected president, Viktor Yanukovich, in 2014. Orchestrated by the US, the Maidan/Euromaidan coup set in motion a chain of events that culminated in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives.

However, there are some fundamental points war hawks in armchairs would like you not to notice; differences between Budapest and Kiev that would make forced regime change a far more difficult prospect if Orban wins.

How the US masterminded Maidan

Presented by Western media as a popular uprising, the ‘Maidan’ revolution was a creation of the US State Department and run out of a very compliant US embassy. The National Endowment for Democracy (NED), a State Department sub-agency, pumped around $14 million into Ukrainian activist groups from 2011 to 2014, the US embassy funded pro-Maidan media outlets, and between 1991 and 2014, the US funnelled a total of $5 billion into “democracy-building programs in Ukraine,” a State Department spokesperson said in 2014.

The NED boasted in a 2015 report that US-funded organizations “played important roles in the peaceful protests in Kiev.” By the time the report had been published, the “peaceful protests” had descended into a bloodbath, with Western-funded far-right militias massacring nearly 100 pro-Western protesters in a false-flag operation, and pro-Western neo-Nazis burning 46 anti-Maidan protesters alive at the Trade Unions House in Odessa. Awkward questions for the neocons, neolibs, and the righteous.

Assistant Secretary of State for Europe Victoria Nuland promised military aid and a billion-dollar loan to opposition politicians, and famously handed out cookies to pro-Western activists in Kiev. Together with US Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt, she helped choose the government that would replace Yanukovich’s. When asked by an obsequious Pyatt in a 2014 phone call if the Europeans might disagree with her choice of candidate, the notorious hawk infamously declared “f**k the EU.”

Now the US backs Orban

The situation in Hungary is radically different. US President Donald Trump is a staunch ally of Orban, and has endorsed the Hungarian PM’s reelection campaign, while Vice President J.D. Vance is scheduled to make a high-profile trip to Budapest just days before the April 12 election.

Furthermore, the US embassy in Budapest has been cleared of ideologues – among them President Joe Biden’s ambassador, David Pressman – and the NED and USAID have both been gutted by Trump. Put simply, the US has stripped back its regime-change machinery in Hungary, and has a keen interest in an Orban victory.

Could the Europeans trigger a Hungarian Maidan?

Nuland and the Americans may have been in the driver’s seat in 2014, but the Maidan coup was also backed by the EU, UK, and the panoply of civil society and activist groups funded by the likes of George Soros’ Open Society Foundations.

British officials met with Ukraine’s pro-Western opposition, while the UK’s embassy in Kiev hastily created a slew of social media accounts aimed at “explaining the benefits for Ukraine of closer European integration.” Brussels sent officials to meet with the Maidan protesters, while both the EU and UK played a role in brokering a deal between Yanukovich and the opposition, which the latter would immediately break, charging Yanukovich with treason.

The EU and UK are committed to arming and funding Ukraine, and therefore both have a vested interest in Orban’s removal. Under Orban, Hungary has used its EU veto powers to delay every package of energy sanctions imposed on Russia by the bloc, opposes Ukraine’s accession to NATO, refuses to supply arms to Kiev, and is currently, along with Slovakia and the Czech Republic, vetoing a €90 billion EU loan package for Kiev.

As RT outlined in the first installment of our ‘Battle for Hungary’ series, the EU has already brought the full weight of its online censorship machinery to bear on Hungary ahead of the election, and plans to keep speech restrictions in place for a week after the vote. However, the bloc’s ability to pressure Orban directly is already nearly exhausted. The EU has withheld funds equal to 3.5% of Hungary’s GDP since 2022 over Orban’s refusal to accept non-European migrants, his banning of LGBT propaganda, and alleged judicial independence concerns – all without triggering meaningful popular unrest in Hungary. Should Orban win, the last remaining tool in the EU’s arsenal is to strip Hungary of its veto rights, an idea already floated by Sweden, Lithuania, and a host of unnamed “EU diplomats” interviewed by Politico earlier this month.

The UK has played a more low-key pre-election game than the EU. However, British Ambassador Justin McKenzie Smith held a closed-doors meeting with pro-Western activists and journalists in Budapest on March 4. The event was organized in conjunction with Political Capital, a think tank funded by the European Commission, Soros, and the NED.

full story at https://www.rt.com/news/636875-hungary-ukraine-maidan-orban/

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