Thursday, October 11, 2018

Moscow buys Hungarian alliance(Budapest even wonders why Ukraine moved military on border with such a great neighbor) in war against Ukraine for about 10bl. Euros

From rferl.orgRussian President Vladimir Putin and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban have agreed to move ahead with a project to build two new reactors at Hungary's Paks nuclear-power plant. The cost of the project is set at 12.5 billion euros ($14.6 billion), most of which will be provided by a 10-billion-euro ($11.2 billion) loan from Moscow.
Hungary was building pressure(started with Moscowian war on Ukraine) on Ukraine for quite some time...numerous allegations of language violations against Ukraine were spurred in main stream media on behalf of Hungary, but not a single case was documented as proven case. I assume that group known as    

"Ukrainian nationalist group known as Myrotvorets" most likely is Russian infiltration as one is even protected by KGB infiltrator Petron Poroshenko(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myrotvorets) personally.

From rferl.org:
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban have agreed to move ahead with a project to build two new reactors at Hungary's Paks nuclear-power plant.

The two men made the announcement following talks in Moscow on September 18.

"I consider [the Paks project] to be a flagship of cooperation, and we have to follow through on it," Orban said at a joint press conference following the meeting.

Putin also called for "expanding nuclear cooperation" between the two countries.

Orban noted, however, that the project faces hurdles concerning licensing, permits, and European Union regulations.

Aleksei Likhachev, head of the Rosatom state nuclear agency, said a date for the start of construction would only be set after a license was issued.

Earlier this year, Austria filed a lawsuit against the European Commission over its approval of the Paks expansion.

Austria, which has no nuclear-power plants, opposes "the use of nuclear-power plants at all levels," Austrian Sustainability Minister Elisabeth Koestinger wrote on Twitter in January.

The cost of the project is set at 12.5 billion euros ($14.6 billion), most of which will be provided by a 10-billion-euro ($11.2 billion) loan from Moscow.

Putin and Orban also discussed bilateral trade, Russian gas supplies for Hungary, and the conflicts in Syria and Ukraine.

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