A reconnaissance mission sent by Budapest to Ukraine to assess the condition of the Druzhba pipeline ran into an unexpected problem before it even properly got underway. One of the five delegation members – a person born in Ukrainian Transcarpathia and still holding a Ukrainian passport – refused to cross the border. The reason? Fear of being conscripted into the Ukrainian military. The story was reported by the Daily News Hungary portal.
A Mission Short of a Full Team
The group was established by a decision of the Hungarian government on March 4th. It was led by Deputy Energy Minister Gabor Czepek, who explained the mission’s purpose in a statement published on Facebook: to assess the condition of the pipeline and create the conditions for its restart. In practice, however, the delegation arrived at its destination short-handed, and on Saturday Prime Minister Viktor Orbán admitted that the experts had still not been granted access to the infrastructure.
The situation sheds new light on the complexity of Hungarian-Ukrainian relations – even members of official government delegations are afraid of the consequences of entering Ukrainian territory.
The Druzhba Pipeline at the Heart of the Dispute
At the end of January, the Druzhba pipeline, which carries Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia through Ukrainian territory, was damaged in a Russian attack. Since then, Kyiv has been assuring everyone that repair work is underway. Budapest, however, takes a different view – Orbán’s government openly accuses Ukrainian authorities of deliberately halting the transit and describes these actions as „blackmail.”
Ukraine, for its part, responded to the Hungarian envoys’ visit with skepticism, unofficially referring to them as „tourists.”
Orbán Escalates – Sanctions, Blockades, Price Caps
The delegation incident is just one element of a growing dispute. Hungary is pursuing a multi-pronged pressure campaign directed at both Kyiv and Brussels:
- Appeal to Ursula von der Leyen – Orbán called on the President of the European Commission to lift the energy sanctions imposed on Russia following the 2022 invasion, citing rising energy prices in the wake of US and Israeli strikes on Iran.
- Blocking EU funds – Budapest announced it would block 90 billion euros in EU loans destined for Ukraine.
- Veto on sanctions – Hungary blocked the adoption of the 20th sanctions package against Russia.
- Protecting the domestic market – a ban on the export of oil and certain fuels was introduced, the use of part of the strategic reserves was authorized, and fuel price caps were announced to shield individual consumers and businesses from rising global oil prices.
A Deadlock That Carries a Price Tag
Behind the diplomatic standoff lie very concrete economic interests. Hungary and Slovakia remain significantly dependent on Russian oil delivered via the Druzhba pipeline. Every week of disruption comes at a real cost to both economies.
Meanwhile, the mission tasked with cutting through this Gordian knot became stuck – quite literally – at the border. And while the reason is remarkably mundane, it perfectly illustrates how an armed conflict complicates even the most technocratic of initiatives. A man with a Ukrainian passport, dispatched by the Hungarian government, found himself facing a choice that no official in Budapest had anticipated.

