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US grants Hungary exemption on Russia sanctions after warm Trump-Orban meeting

US President Donald Trump (R) and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban hold a meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC on November 7, 2025. (AFP)
US President Donald Trump (R) and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban hold a meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC on November 7, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 51 sec ago

US grants Hungary exemption on Russia sanctions after warm Trump-Orban meeting

US grants Hungary exemption on Russia sanctions after warm Trump-Orban meeting
  • Trump, aiming to put pressure on Moscow to end its war with Ukraine, appeared sympathetic to Orban’s position

WASHINGTON: The United States has granted Hungary a one-year exemption from US sanctions for using Russian oil and gas, a White House official said on Friday, after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban pressed his case for a reprieve during a friendly meeting with President Donald Trump in Washington.
Last month, Trump imposed Ukraine-related sanctions on Russian oil companies Lukoil and Rosneft that carried the threat of further sanctions on entities in countries that buy oil from those firms.
Orban, a long-time Trump ally, met with Trump at the White House on Friday for their first bilateral meeting since the Republican returned to power and explained why his country needed to use Russian oil at a time when Trump has been pressing Europe to stop doing so.
Orban said the issue was vital for Hungary, which is a European country, and pledged to lay out “the consequences for the Hungarian people, and for the Hungarian economy, not to get oil and gas from Russia.”
Trump, aiming to put pressure on Moscow to end its war with Ukraine, appeared sympathetic to Orban’s position.
“We’re looking at it, because it’s very different for him to get the oil and gas from other areas,” Trump said. “As you know, they don’t have ... the advantage of having sea. It’s a great country, it’s a big country, but they don’t have sea. They don’t have the ports.”
“But many European countries are buying oil and gas from Russia, and they have been for years,” Trump added. “And I said, ‘What’s that all about?’“
The White House official noted that, in addition to the sanctions exemption, Hungary had committed to buying US liquefied natural gas with contracts valued at some $600 million.
Hungary has maintained its reliance on Russian energy since the start of the 2022 conflict in Ukraine, prompting criticism from several European Union and NATO allies.
International Monetary Fund figures show Hungary relied on Russia for 74 percent of its gas and 86 percent of its oil in 2024, warning that an EU-wide cutoff of Russian natural gas alone could force output losses in Hungary exceeding 4 percent of GDP.
The two men also discussed Russia’s war with Ukraine.
Trump said last month that he would meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Hungarian capital, but the meeting was put on hold after Russia rejected a ceasefire.
Trump on Friday said Russia simply did not want to stop fighting. “The basic dispute is they just don’t want to stop yet. And I think they will,” he said.
The president asked Orban if he thought Ukraine could win the war. A “miracle can happen,” Orban responded.

ECONOMIC COOPERATION
Greater economic cooperation between the US and Hungary was also on the agenda. Orban predicted a “golden age” between the two nations and made a point of criticizing President Joe Biden’s administration, a sure way to garner favor with Trump, who continues to use Biden as a frequent foil.
The Hungarian leader, who faces an election in 2026, has cultivated a strong personal rapport with Trump over the years, including on their shared hard-line immigration policies. Trump on Friday gave Orban his support for the election.
“He has not made a mistake on immigration. So he’s respected by everybody, he’s liked by some ... I like and respect him, I’m a double,” Trump said. “And that’s the way Hungary is being led. They’re being led properly, and that’s why he’s going to be very successful in his upcoming election.”
The EU’s top court ruled last year that Hungary must pay a 200-million-euro ($216 million) fine for not implementing changes to its policy of handling migrants and asylum seekers at its border. It must also pay a daily fine of one million euros until it fully implements the measures.
Orban referenced the fine during his meeting with Trump but said Hungary would handle its intra-EU disputes on its own.
A tangible sign of Hungary’s improved ties with the US under the Trump administration came last month when the US fully restored Hungary’s status in its visa waiver program.
Hungary has pushed back against plans by the European Commission to phase out the EU’s imports of all Russian gas and LNG by the end of 2027, deepening a rift with Brussels over relations with Moscow.
Ratings agency S&P noted that Hungary has one of the most energy-intensive economies in Europe – and that its domestic refineries are built to process Russian Urals crude oil.
While it said gas supplies from Azerbaijan and Qatar could help replace Russian supply, it warned that Hungary’s fiscal and external accounts remain vulnerable to an energy shock.


US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues

US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues
Updated 6 sec ago

US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues

US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues
  • The Trump administration has sought to ramp up pressure on Democrats in Congress to agree to a Republican plan to fund the federal government, which would allow it to reopen

WASHINGTON: US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned Friday he could force airlines to cut up to 20 percent of flights if the government shutdown did not end, as US airlines on Friday scrambled to make unprecedented government-imposed reductions.
The Federal Aviation Administration instructed airlines to cut 4 percent of flights on Friday at 40 major airports because of the government shutdown. The cuts will rise to 10 percent by November 14.
Separately, air traffic controller absences on Friday forced the FAA to delay hundreds of flights at 10 airports including Atlanta, San Francisco, Houston, Phoenix, Washington, D.C., and Newark. By 7:30 p.m. ET (1130 GMT), there were more than 5,300 flight delays, according to FlightAware, a flight-tracking website.
At Reagan Washington National, delays were averaging four hours, while 17 percent of flights were canceled and nearly 40 percent delayed.
During the record 38-day government shutdown, 13,000 air traffic controllers and 50,000 security screeners have been forced to work without pay, leading to increased absenteeism. Many air traffic controllers were notified on Thursday that they would receive no pay for a second pay period next week.
The Trump administration has sought to ramp up pressure on Democrats in Congress to agree to a Republican plan to fund the federal government, which would allow it to reopen.
Raising the specter of dramatic air-travel disruptions is one such effort. Democrats contend Republicans are to blame for the shutdown because they refuse to negotiate over extending health insurance subsidies.
Duffy told reporters it was possible he could require 20 percent cuts in air traffic if things get worse and more controllers do not show up for work. “I assess the data,” Duffy said. “We’re going to make decisions based on what we see in the airspace.”
The cuts, which began at 6 a.m. ET (1100 GMT), include about 700 flights from the four largest carriers — American Airlines , Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines — and are set to rise to 6 percent on Tuesday and then 10 percent by November 14 if the shutdown does not end.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul posted a photo of an airport flight board filled with canceled flights. “The GOP shutdown has grounded America — just in time for the holidays!” she wrote.
Earlier this week, FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said 20-40 percent of controllers were not showing up for work on any given day.

MORE CUTS WOULD BE ‘PROBLEMATIC’, AMERICAN AIRLINES SAYS
American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said on Friday he did not expect significant disruption for customers from government-ordered flight reductions initially, but warned that the impact would increase.
“This level of cancelation is going to grow over time and that’s something that is going to be problematic,” Isom told CNBC.
American told Reuters its 220 flight cancelations on Friday affected 12,000 passengers and the airline re-routed a majority of them within a few hours.
Fewer flights will be cut over the weekend as scheduled flight volumes decline.
United Airlines said half of affected customers were able to be rebooked within four hours of their original departure time. The airline canceled 184 flights on Friday and expected to cut 168 on Saturday and 158 on Sunday.
Duffy initially announced on Wednesday that flights would be reduced 10 percent on Friday. But the agency decided to phase in the cuts starting at 4 percent to make the move less disruptive, he said on Friday.
Duffy said safety data was behind the move, including incidents of planes not maintaining separation and ground incursions.
The FAA is restricting space launches, and authorities said they could cut up to 10 percent of private-plane flights at high-traffic airports. International flights are not affected by the move.