Orbán wins again as furious EU envoys take church
patriarch off Russian sanctions list
Russian Orthodox leader Patriarch Kirill removed from
EU sanctions list after objections from Budapest.
BY LEONIE
KIJEWSKI AND JACOPO BARIGAZZI
June 2,
2022 4:08 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-envoys-approve-russia-sanctions-with-oil-ban-set-to-become-law/
The
European Union finally agreed on the details of its latest package of sanctions
against Russia — but only after Viktor Orbán's Hungarian government pulled one
last trick.
At the 11th
hour, Hungary demanded that diplomats meeting to put the finishing touches on
the EU's oil ban remove the head of the Russian Orthodox Church from the list
of sanctioned individuals.
Patriarch
Kirill of Moscow has been criticized for his closeness to Vladimir Putin, and
was included in the proposed list of people to be sanctioned in the bloc's
sixth round of measures against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.
In the end,
diplomats felt they had no choice but to give in, and Kirill was duly removed
from the list.
"We
finally adopted 6th sanctions package, crucial for Ukraine and for all of us.
Very disappointing and hardly acceptable that the agreement reached by European
leaders was not fully respected by some. We will not retreat. I suggest to name
[the] 7th package #KGB: Kirill, Gas & Banks," tweeted Arnoldas
Pranckevičius, Lithuania's ambassador to the EU.
The
Hungarian government insisted Orbán's position on Patriarch Kirill had been
well known to other EU countries. Hungary's foreign minister called the process
a "long battle" but "worth it," adding that the sanctions
package is now in line with the country's national security interests.
But the
episode, which follows Orbán holding up progress on the main oil embargo for a
month, has left a bitter aftertaste for many countries.
The
question is, what can they do to stop him from repeating what one envoy called
"Hungarian hostage" tactics in the future?
“Many
member states are disappointed with Hungary," another EU diplomat said.
"Hungary has lost the last sympathies of its former friends in Central and
Eastern Europe with this unnecessary stunt.”
A third
diplomat said Hungary would be more isolated as a result of the way it has held
up this latest round of EU sanctions.
"Nobody
is happy with what happened here," the envoy said. "A lot of
grumpiness on all sides, especially with the Poles. They are really done with
Hungary now. This doesn't buy you any friends."
For Orbán,
however, one thing seems obvious: His tactics worked. He didn't want Russian
oil deliveries by pipeline to be included in the EU ban because it would
endanger supplies of vital fuels and hit Hungary's economy. So he simply
refused to agree to the sanctions until other leaders gave in.
While many
grew frustrated with the obstruction, some other countries were happy to
shelter privately behind Orbán's more vocal positioning. In the end, he got
what he wanted. Pipelines were excluded from the oil ban when EU leaders met in
person on Monday to agree to the outline of the deal over dinner.
Then
Hungary repeated the successful ploy, raising an objection to Kirill's listing,
which critics said had not been mentioned previously.
Another diplomat
said that Hungary had the rest of the EU at its mercy. "We were forced to
withdraw it," the diplomat said. "For pragmatism, they have agreed to
the sixth package without this listing, so that it can come into force
quickly."
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The prize
for the EU is an embargo on Putin's oil exports that falls some way short of
what European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen originally said must be
a "complete ban."
If
countries including Germany and Poland honor their pledges voluntarily to ditch
pipeline supplies, the combined impact with the ban on fuel delivered by ship
will be to cut oil imports from Russia by about 90 percent.
To get
landlocked Hungary on board, leaders decided to restrict the ban to Russian oil
that arrives on tankers, temporarily exempting fuel flowing into the EU via
pipelines.
With the
ambassadors now signing off on the plan, it is on the path to becoming law. No
date has been announced for when the temporary exemption will come to an end.
Suzanne
Lynch, Giorgio Leali and Barbara Moens contributed reporting.
This
article has been updated.
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