“If NATO approves a package of €100 billion for a period of five years, this will result in additional costs for the Hungarian budget in the amount of €10 billion... To implement such a decision, which carries the threat of war, the money of Hungarian taxpayers is not suitable,” he is quoted as saying TASS.

Szijjártó stressed that he was not the only one who opposed the idea of ​​​​creating a fund for military assistance to the Kyiv regime.

Earlier, Politico, citing an unnamed European diplomat, reported that NATO countries “rolled their eyes” at the initiative of NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Ukraine.

Stoltenberg himself said that the alliance countries agreed to strengthen its role in coordinating military assistance to Ukraine.

According to him, NATO does not discuss the direct presence of the alliance’s military forces in Ukraine.