Hungary, Israel and U.S. Leaders Rally at Budapest Summit: ‘No Migration, No Antisemitism, No Terrorism’

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BUDAPEST (VINnews) — Hungary rallied behind a unified pledge of “No migration, no antisemitism, no terrorism” at its third annual International Pro-Israel Summit, where leaders from Hungary, Israel and the United States declared Central Europe a bulwark for faith, borders and freedom amid perceived Western moral drift.

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The two-day event, organized by the Center for Fundamental Rights, drew top officials and commentators to Budapest’s Museum of Ethnography late last month to affirm a shared stand against terrorism, antisemitism and open-border policies.

Center director general Miklós Szánthó opened by accusing Brussels of waging legal and political warfare against conservative governments “in service of foreign interests.” He called Hungary “an island of peace” and predicted Budapest would soon become “the capital of peace.”

Israeli Education Minister Yoav Kisch hailed Prime Minister Viktor Orbán as “a true friend of Israel” and praised Hungary’s zero-tolerance stance on antisemitism. Describing the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks as a “barbaric and brutal massacre,” Kisch said Israel had “crushed the Iranian-backed Shiite axis” and ensured Gaza “will no longer pose a threat.”

Kisch rejected genocide accusations against Israel, insisting “never has an army acted as morally as the IDF” despite Hamas using civilians as human shields. He credited President Donald Trump with destroying Iran’s nuclear facilities, bolstering U.S. leadership and Israeli security.

Hungarian Defense Minister Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky called Israel a “strategic partner” and urged Europe to regain moral clarity. He noted no Hungarian groups support the BDS movement and that Israeli national teams play home matches in Hungary.

Yair Netanyahu, son of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Israel’s post-Oct. 7 operations had removed an existential threat for the first time in decades. Warning of Western Europe’s “free fall” from mass illegal immigration, he praised Hungary as Europe’s safest place for Jews and cited the Orbán-Netanyahu alliance as a defense of “Judeo-Christian civilization.”

Fred Fleitz, former National Security Council chief of staff and vice president of the America First Policy Institute, framed the summit within Trump’s Abraham Accords and 20-point Middle East plan. He called Hungary “Israel’s best friend in Europe” and said defeating terror in Israel prevents it from targeting Christian Europe next.

Other speakers included Israeli Transportation Minister Miri Regev (via video), Knesset members Ohad Tal and Simcha Rothman, and U.S. advocates Bryan E. Leib and former VA Secretary Robert Wilkie.

Leib closed by praising Hungary as the only European nation where Jews feel fully safe, calling it “the beating heart of common sense and a nation of peace and stability.”

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U Thant
U Thant
2 months ago

TY , Orban

See
See
2 months ago

Kesenem sapen

NY has fallen
NY has fallen
2 months ago

Tying “No Migration” to “No Antisemitism” (although they’re nowadays correlated) is gonna give an excuse to all PC Euro-trash member out there to oppose this. Europe had plenty of antisemitism before the mass-Muslim migration that culminated in the Holocaust.

Rose
Rose
2 months ago

Unfortunately, Hungary is losing population and has a sluggish economy. Budapest’s buildings are still crumbling.
As much as I hate what’s happening in most of liberal Europe, there’s a reason they embraced the Muslim influx.
Europe needs fresh blood now, they should have let our ancestors live and thrive.
Now it’s either declining population or…