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FM: Central European countries are now “net security contributors” to NATO’s operations

“We central Europeans believe that NATO will continue as the strongest and most successful military alliance of the world,” the foreign minister said.

The foreign minister has announced that Central European countries, Hungary among them, are now “net security contributors” to NATO’s operations.

At a meeting of the foreign ministers of nine NATO member states in Vilnius, Péter Szijjártó, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, noted that Hungary currently has 830 troops serving in NATO and counterterrorism missions worldwide.

“We central Europeans believe that NATO will continue as the strongest and most successful military alliance of the world,” the minister said. The significance of NATO is especially clear to the central European region, which is “wedged between the East and the West,” he added.

According to MTI, the minister said Hungary had shown solidarity with the Baltic states where the focus is on challenges from the East. In recent years, 340 Hungarian troops have participated in operations on land and some 200 in the surveillance of the Baltic air space. Hungarian Gripens will return to the region in 2022.

Minister Szijjártó said that at the same time, Hungary sees challenges from the south as of primary importance. Tens or hundreds of thousands may break out to enter Europe illegally, he said.

The minister said the migration route on the Western Balkans may soon be full again, which is a security risk as uncontrolled illegal immigration may open the door for terrorism. “We expect our allies to take that threat seriously,” he said.

Photo credit: Origo