Orbán signed a secret MEGA agreement with Putin – Ursula von der Leyen had a tantrum! n1
Orbán signed a secret MEGA agreement with Putin – Ursula von der Leyen had a tantrum!
Budapest/Moscow/Brussels – This is the deal that could ultimately divide the European Union. On the night of Friday into Saturday, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán signed a massive energy and security agreement with Russia in a top-secret ceremony in the Kremlin. The deal, worth tens of billions of euros, aims to provide Hungary with extremely cheap Russian gas and oil for the next 25 years – on terms that would be considered generous even for Belarus.
According to information from Hungarian government sources that reached our editorial office, the “Budapest-Moscow Pact 2026” includes not only long-term fossil fuel supply agreements, but also close military-technical and intelligence cooperation. In return, Hungary is expected to provide Russian companies with preferential access to its energy market and undertake not to support certain EU sanctions against Russia in the future.

“This is not just a slap in the face for all the Ukrainian victims,” von der Leyen reportedly shouted. “This is a stab in the back for the entire European Union!”
Viktor Orbán himself appeared completely calm in a brief press release in Budapest. “Hungary has the right to provide affordable energy to its citizens. Anyone who calls this a betrayal is betraying the interests of the peoples of Europe,” he said, through his spokesman, Zoltán Kovács. Behind closed doors, Orbán reportedly also remarked: “Brussels can threaten us as much as it wants. As long as I am in power, Hungary will never sacrifice its sovereignty for Ms von der Leyen’s green fantasy.”
The agreement comes at a sensitive time. Europe is still grappling with the aftermath of the war in Ukraine, energy prices remain high in many countries, and reliance on liquefied natural gas from the United States and Qatar has sent electricity bills skyrocketing for ordinary citizens. While Germany and France continue to pursue costly green energy transitions, Orbán has seemingly chosen a pragmatic path – at any cost.
Particularly explosive: Under the agreement, Russia will not only supply Hungary with gas and oil, but also provide cutting-edge nuclear technology to expand the Paks nuclear power plant. The Russian state-owned company Rosatom is expected to play a key role. At the same time, Hungary is reportedly giving Russian intelligence services easier access to certain data – a point that has caused shock and alarm in Brussels.

António Costa, the President of the European Council, initially tried to defuse the tension, but reportedly described the situation internally as “one of the most serious losses of trust since the founding of the Union.” Several Eastern European countries, including Poland and the Baltic states, have already openly called for Hungary to be excluded from the Schengen zone and for financial sanctions to be imposed.
In Budapest, however, Orbán’s supporters celebrated the agreement as a “historic victory for common sense.” Thousands gathered in Kossuth Square, waving Hungarian flags and chanting slogans such as “Viktor Orbán – the defender of Hungary!” Many citizens, who have suffered from high energy prices in recent years, see the agreement as long-awaited relief.
“Finally, someone cares about ordinary people, and not just the green ideologues in Brussels,” a 54-year-old teacher from Debrecen told our reporter. “Let the Germans heat their homes with wind turbines if they want. We want warm homes and affordable electricity.”
Behind the scenes, tensions are growing. Diplomats in Brussels are already talking about an “Orbán crisis 2.0” that could push the EU to the brink of fragmentation. A senior EU official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told our editorial team: “If we do not act decisively now, we will lose all credibility.”

But if we act too harshly, we risk Orbán taking Hungary out of the EU altogether. That would set a precedent and have devastating consequences.”
Viktor Orbán is apparently fully aware of the risks. In a closed-door meeting, he reportedly told his closest allies: “The EU needs Hungary more than Hungary needs the EU. It has always been that way, and it always will be that way.”
Meanwhile, Ursula von der Leyen is reportedly preparing for an open confrontation. According to insiders, she is planning an extraordinary European Council meeting and intends to travel to Budapest in person to “hold Orbán accountable.” Whether such a meeting will even take place remains uncertain.
Orbán has shown repeatedly in the past that he does not shy away from confrontation with Brussels.
This deal with Russia could not only secure Hungary’s energy supply for a generation, but also reshape Europe’s political landscape. The question facing the entire continent now is: Is Viktor Orbán a traitor – or simply the last true sovereigntist in Europe?
The coming days and weeks will decide whether the EU is strong enough to handle this open defiance – or whether the “Budapest-Moscow Pact 2026” will mark the beginning of the end of European unity.




