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A new security zone is emerging, stretching from Scandinavia to Romania. Ukraine could become a bridge not necessarily between East and West, but between Poland and Romania. How does current Hungarian policy relate to this and what are the consequences?
Csilla Fedinec's article (in Hungarian) can be read on 444.hu.
In the background, searches, wiretapping, rhetorical warfare: what have the Szijjártó-Kuleba meetings been about so far?
Where do the Hungarian and Ukrainian foreign ministers fit into the system of government? How have relations between the two countries evolved over the past three years in the light of the meetings between the acting Foreign Ministers? The paper explores these questions ahead of the meeting of foreign ministers in Uzhhorod on 29 January 2024.
Csilla Fedinec's article (in Hungarian) can be read on 444.hu.
"In Hungarian political discourse and journalism, there is a growing conclusion that the European Union is in fact nothing more than a new version of the Soviet Union." Are those who make such comparisons right?
Csilla Fedinec's article (in Hungarian) can be read on 444.hu.
With the liquidation of Nagorno-Karabakh, one of the frozen conflict zones in the post-Soviet space has been eliminated. How have these conflict zones developed throughout history? How has the fate of Nagorno-Karabakh evolved over the past decades and under what circumstances was it dismantled? How might this affect security in the region and the fate of minorities?
Csilla Fedinec's article (in Hungarian) can be read on 444.hu.