EU rebuts claim on mandatory military draft proposal
The head of EU diplomacy, Josep Borrell, refuted the words of Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto regarding the allegedly planned mandatory military draft in Europe. "We are very far from having such powers," he stated, emphasizing that such a decision belongs to the member countries.
5:53 AM EDT, June 3, 2024
On Monday, Hungarian government spokesperson Zoltan Kovacs posted about the Hungarian Foreign Minister's participation in a meeting of foreign ministers in Brussels. According to the statement, Szijjarto condemned the proposals regarding the allegedly mandatory military draft in Europe as "unacceptable" and declared that the government would strongly oppose "sending youth from Central Europe and Hungary to fight in Ukraine."
When asked about this at a press conference after the meeting, the head of EU diplomacy smiled and refuted this post.
"The European Union does not have the ability to announce a mandatory military draft. We are very far from having such powers," he emphasized.
"This is a decision that belongs to the member countries. I read in the newspapers that the United Kingdom is considering it, but the European Union cannot do such a thing and is not even considering it," he added.