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Extracted Text (OCR)
The Trump administration’s friendly and intensive contacts with the Orban government represent a radical
departure: It watches idly as Orban dismantles his nation’s democratic institutions. For instance, the pro-
government weekly Figyelo recently issued an enemies list of about 200 prominent opposition individuals. Most
were local civil society advocates, but the list also included U.S. citizens, many of them scholars of economics,
Judaism and nationalism at the Soros-funded Central European University (such as Leon Botstein and Allen
Feldman). The government has erected contrived legal barriers in an effort to close the institution, a graduate
school devoted to liberal values and based in Budapest. Meanwhile, Hungary harassed the U.S.-based Open Society
Foundations until they decided to move their operations from Budapest to Berlin. Two Hungarian newspapers,
Magyar Nemzet and Budapest Beacon , shut down this spring as advertisers vanished because of their opposition
to the Hungarian government, leaving only one print opposition daily.
The State Department and the U.S. Embassy in Budapest have remained almost entirely silent about all of this.
The compliant new U.S. approach was initially discussed at a Dec. 18, 2017, meeting of the National Security
Council’s policy coordinating committee led by Fiona Hill, the council’s senior director for European and Russian
affairs, and Assistant Secretary Mitchell, according to two sources familiar with the proceedings. They concluded
that previous efforts under the Bush administration, and especially the Obama administration, had not paid off, so
it was time to try something else.
Accordingly, the first high-level meeting between the two sides took place at the White House on May 15, when John
Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser, received Jeno Megyesy, Orban’s chief adviser on the United States.
(Megyesy was also the official point of contact for then-Trump aide Carter Page’s meetings in Budapest during the
campaign.) This coming week, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto is scheduled to meet Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo; although Szijjarto has visited Washington an eye-popping seven times in the past 18 months, this will be
the first such high-level bilateral meeting since 2012. The only step left would be for Trump to receive Orban — the
first European head of government to endorse Trump over Hillary Clinton and congratulate him on his victory — at
the White House.
What, if anything, is the United States getting from Hungary for this appeasement? The $12 billion Russian-financed
and secretly signed Russian Paks II nuclear plant in southern Hungary is one reflection of Orban’s Russian
orientation. (Orban previously welcomed energy investments from the now-failed Russian South Stream pipeline.)
Hungary spends only 1 percent of its gross domestic product on defense, among the lowest levels for NATO
members, despite Trump’s insistence that nations step up their payments. (Budapest said last year that it would
increase spending, but it has said this many times before.)
Many intelligent Hungarians — watching the complicity, or at least inaction, of the U.S. government — do not
understand what is happening, they tell us. They know that Trump wants to be different from Barack Obama,
including in his approach to Hungary. But they search in vain for logic in Trump’s posture. For those who still believe
in the merits of a Western-style democracy there, which is a large majority in Budapest and a large minority in the
countryside, the policy of appeasement signifies abandonment. They would like Washington to keep hope alive.
People who suffer from, or are ashamed by, the government’s anti-Semitic discourse and attacks on liberal norms
long for a different America.
And there may be one. David Cornstein, the new U.S. ambassador to Hungary, who will arrive in Budapest in a few
weeks, might make a difference. In his appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in early May, he
spoke eloquently about promoting American values. He promised to fight against anti-Semitism, not just in Hungary
but elsewhere in Europe, too. His nice, old-fashioned remarks were even cleared by the State Department and the
U.S. Embassy in Budapest. He received strong expressions of support from Republican and Democratic senators,
including Sen. Benjamin Cardin (D-Md.), who is something of an expert on Hungarian politics. There is still hope,
then, that decent, humane values will be heard by Hungarians who, in search of answers, continue to look to the
United States.
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