During an official visit to an army base in Tata, President János Áder said Hungary’s armed forces are ready and able to guarantee the country’s security, and their capability will increase in the future.
While inspecting equipment procured under the army’s development program, the president and Commander-in-Chief of the Hungarian Armed Forces said the reforms embarked on in 2017 were the first such serious undertaking in Hungary since the second world war. By 2024, the president said Hungary will have met its NATO commitment to spend up to 2 percent of its GDP on defense-related development.
President Áder noted that Hungarian soldiers had played an important role in various international operations in recent decades, earning the respect of soldiers from other countries with whom they served. The president also referred to the nine-member contingent which returned home from Afghanistan on Tuesday, and noted that the lives of seven Hungarian soldiers had been lost there.
Arriving at the base of the 25th György Klapka Rifle Brigade in Szomód in a new military helicopter, President Áder was received with military honors by Tibor Benkő, Minister of Defense, and Romulusz Ruszin-Szendi, Commander of the Hungarian Armed Forces. The president inspected Hungary’s new German Leopard 2A4 armoured vehicles and Turkish Ejder Yalcin Gidran armored vehicles before observing shooting demonstration using handguns manufactured in Hungary.