The first twenty years of the twenty-first century can also be seen as a period of colorful, velvety revolutions, coups d'état, postmodern coups, stated Márton Békés, research director of the House of Terror Museum, in this week's edition of Mandiner's podcast series Reaksió Plusz, referring to the other day . to his blog post, in which he scrutinized processes "corresponding to the current geopolitical interests of the same international actor" .

The historian explained that all this happened in three waves, first in Belgrade and Georgia, and the first Ukrainian Orange Revolution took place, then the "act" of the Arab Spring, which was accompanied by bloodbaths everywhere, followed. At the end of 2000, there was finally a South-East Asian seething, for example in Myanmar and Hong Kong. Then the coronavirus arrived, at which time the Poles began to "melt" the Belarusian regime, and they almost got it back when they organized movements there in connection with the tightening of abortion regulations.

The old method, explained the historian, was about using military equipment and organizing coups, but the "landings" have now been taken over by destabilization.

Instead of a shower of bombs, the new method is now the rain of money, an attempt was made to do this in Hungary as well, he explained. He pointed out: one of the key figures in the NATO operations in Belgrade, American General Wesley Clark, dropped bombs in our southern neighbor a few decades ago, and this year he sat in the executive board of the organization that indirectly financially supported the campaign of the Hungarian left before April 3, he pointed out. Békés for the foreign benefits paid to Action for Democracy for the Everyone's Hungary Movement.

The goal is no longer to occupy or take over countries, but to destabilize them, as we see in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic or even Slovakia. "It was only the wisdom of the Hungarian voters that we didn't go this way in the spring," he noted, adding that there are colorful revolutions that remain attempts and will not be successful. According to him, each country should be allowed to follow its own path, along its unique internal arrangements.

He also mentioned that Donald Trump's presidency was the first in decades when the US did not launch military operations overseas. Thus, Viktor Orbán was right to point out in connection with the Russian-Ukrainian conflict that the former president is the only guarantee of peace today, since the peace process can only start following the decision of the United States. During Trump's time, the geopolitical goal was to demarcate the Russians and China, now it has been possible to bring these two powers closer together, partly with the sanctions policy.

For us, the current situation is compounded by the fact that the European Union behaves as if it were an unmanned aircraft controlled by a joystick from Washington.

There is no strategic autonomy or independent decision-making in the leadership of the EU. At the same time, he continued, the question must be asked as to why the EU, as a military and energy dwarf, would have any interest in getting involved in the Russian-Ukrainian war. He also called it a huge problem that the continent seemed to have acquiesced to the explosion of the Northern Currents.

American billions coming to the left-wing campaign and the related "civilian" defense Békés suggested: "Let's play with the idea that there is a right-wing organization that also runs in the elections, with several smaller and larger conservative parties behind it, and one in Moscow, the the foundation, which is made up of members connected to the military-technological sphere and even includes a former Russian ambassador in Budapest, sends him 1.8 billion HUF rubles as campaign support. We would all rightly disapprove of all this."

András Schiffer, also referring to his interview with Mandiner, emphasized that the diplomatic, economic, intelligence and military complex of the deep state in Washington may be behind Action for Democracy, which calls Hungary a battleground state on its website, saying that democratic culture must be developed.

"I don't think that anywhere, especially in our region, democratic culture should be developed either by bombing or by raining money, it should be left to the people everywhere to decide on the leadership of individual sovereign countries," he said, adding that Dávid Korányi, who is Karácsony receives a salary from City Hall, but he was still part of Bajnai's moon court, he also came into contact with György Soros.

Source: Mandarin

Author: Dániel Kacsoh

Photo: Attila Polyák