After inheriting a vast nuclear arsenal post-Soviet Union collapse, Ukraine chose to relinquish it, motivated by financial ...
Just after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States, Ukraine and Russia signed an agreement to control nuclear weapons and respect each other’s borders. It was called the Budapest ...
EU leaders managed to parry Hungary’s attempt to derail their Ukraine summit last week, but diplomats are now bracing for a ...
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán says Hungary will poll its citizens on Ukraine’s potential future membership in the ...
After the fall of the Soviet Union, Ukraine inherited the worlds third-largest nuclear arsenal. However, the country chose to ...
On its official Facebook page, the Hungarian government opposed “preserving Ukraine,” but later deleted the post, reports ...
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said NATO membership for Ukraine is out of the question. In an interview with the Washington Examiner, Szijjártó was asked where Hungary stands on security ...
The EU cannot afford to finance Ukraine's military efforts as U.S. financial aid is no longer guaranteed, Hungarian Prime ...
As the Trump administration works to end the conflict, it should keep in mind why the fate of Ukraine matters here in America ...
When the former Soviet republics declared independence in the early 1990s, Ukraine became the owner of the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal.
Russian President Vladimir Putin mourns the Soviet Union’s collapse and views Ukraine as illegitimate. Ukraine is a fledgling ...
So if the west does abandon Ukraine, game theory suggests that the world should expect a proliferation of nuclear powers.