Post-Orbán Hungary faces a migration trap: it wants to preserve the hardline system built under Viktor Orbán — strong borders, no quotas, no resettlement — while repairing relations with Brussels and respecting EU law. As Viktor Marsai argues in the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune, the new Tisza government is not abandoning Hungary’s migration doctrine; it is trying to save it. But EU fines, the new Pact on Migration and Asylum, labor shortages and business pressure now expose a central contradiction: can Hungary remain politically closed to migration while legally and economically operating inside Europe’s shared framework?
Hungary After Orbán: The Migration Trap Facing the New Government
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June 2026
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Hungary After Orbán: The Migration Trap Facing the New Government
Post-Orbán Hungary faces a migration trap: it wants to preserve the hardline system built under Viktor Orbán — strong borders, no quotas, no resettlement — while repairing relations with Brussels and respecting EU law. As Viktor Marsai argues in the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune, the new Tisza government is not abandoning Hungary’s migration doctrine; it is […]
Are There Laws of War?
Azar Gat, Military Theory and the Conduct of War, Oxford University Press, 2025 As the ongoing conflict in Iran has made clear, war remains a stubbornly persistent part of human life, as it has been since before the beginning of recorded history. Not surprisingly, this ancient practice has inspired a large and growing body of […]
Towards a Civilizational Perception of the Jewish State
In contemporary studies of international relations, the cultural background of foreign policy has become a central analytical tool for understanding how nations and non-state actors behave on the global stage. Scholars such as Alexander Wendt, Peter Katzenstein, and Benedict Anderson have demonstrated that states do not act solely according to material interests; rather, their foreign […]
