Posted originally on Feb 26, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |
Hungary is deploying troops to protect its nation against Ukraine’s oil blockade. The war in Ukraine has mutated into something far larger and far more dangerous than the public is led to believe. Orban will “deploy soldiers and equipment to protect key energy infrastructure” as the tensions between Ukraine and Hungary boil over.
“I see that Ukraine is preparing further actions aimed at harming our energy infrastructure,” Orban noted, and thus the Hungarian military and police will be positioned around power plants, distribution stations, and control centers as a defensive measure.
Europe has been deeply split over how to handle Russian energy and the war against Moscow. Hungary and Slovakia heavily rely on Russian energy and cannot bend to Brussels at the expense of their economies. Orban recently vetoed a €90 billion EU loan to Ukraine unless oil flows through the Druzhba pipeline resume, illustrating that Budapest’s priorities are no longer aligned with Brussels.
Under stress and loss of confidence, nations shift from collective alliance goals to nationalist survival strategies. Hungary’s actions are not a spontaneous security reaction; they are emerging amid an intensifying domestic political campaign ahead of a critical April election. The people are beginning to view the European Union as a hindrance rather than an alliance. Hungary has become the black sheep of the bloc.
The war in Ukraine has ceased to be just a battlefield conflict. It is a catalyst for realignment within Europe, and it is exposing the cracks between governments that see the conflict as a strategic priority and those that see it as a liability. What we are witnessing is the beginning of a deeper fragmentation in Western policy, where alliances are tested not only by external adversaries but by the internal cycles of confidence, power, and national survival.
