Rubio seeks to bolster US ties with Slovakia and Hungary

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U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio meets with Slovakia's President Peter Pellegrini at the Presidential Palace in Bratislava, Slovakia, Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026. (REUTERS)
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Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban, right, and Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico, left, wait for the start of a round table meeting for the EU summit at Alden Biesen Castle in Bilzen-Hoeselt, Belgium, Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Omar Havana)
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Updated 15 February 2026
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Rubio seeks to bolster US ties with Slovakia and Hungary

  • Energy cooperation and bilateral issues among key topics to be discussed
  • Trump’s hard-right supporters view ‌Hungary’s Orban as a model

BRATISLAVA: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio began a two-day trip to eastern ​Europe on Sunday to bolster ties with Slovakia and Hungary, whose conservative leaders, often at odds with other EU countries, have warm ties with President Donald Trump.

Rubio will use the trip to discuss energy cooperation and bilateral issues, including NATO commitments, the State Department said in an Announcement last week.
“These are countries that are very strong with us, very cooperative with the US, work very closely with us,” Rubio told reporters before departing for Europe on Thursday. 

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On Monday, Rubio is expected to meet Hungarian leader Viktor Orban, who is trailing in most polls ahead of an election in April when he could be voted out of power.

Rubio, who in his dual role also serves as Trump’s national security adviser, met Slovak President Peter Pellegrini ‌on Sunday on his ‌arrival in Bratislava, the first visit by a US secretary of ​state ‌in seven ​years, and discussed energy and defense.
“An important topic of the talks was ... defense cooperation and the fulfilment of commitments arising from NATO summits,” Pellegrini’s office said in a statement.
Rubio later met Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, who visited Trump in Florida last month. The US diplomat’s trip follows his attendance at the Munich Security Conference over the last few days.
On Monday, Rubio is expected to meet Hungarian leader Viktor Orban, who is trailing in most polls ahead of an election in April when he could be voted out of power.
“President (Trump) said he’s very supportive ‌of him, and so are we,” Rubio said ahead of ‌his trip. “But, obviously, we were going to do that visit as ​a bilateral visit.”
Both Fico and Orban have clashed with EU institutions over probes into backsliding on democratic rules.
They have ‌also maintained ties with Moscow, criticized and at times delayed the imposition of EU sanctions on Russia and opposed sending military aid to Ukraine.
Even as other EU countries have secured alternative energy supplies after Moscow invaded Ukraine in 2022, including by buying US natural gas, Slovakia and Hungary have continued to buy Russian gas and oil, a practice the US has criticized.
Rubio said this would be discussed during his brief tour, but did not give any details.
Fico, who has described the EU as an institution that is in “deep crisis,” has showered Trump with praise saying he would bring peace back to Europe.
But Fico criticized the US capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in early January.
Hungary and Slovakia have also so far diverged from Trump’s request for all NATO members to significantly increase their military spending to 5 percent of GDP, and have raised defense spending to NATO’s minimum threshold of 2 percent, a lower level than ​some other NATO members.
On nuclear cooperation, Slovakia signed ​an agreement with the US last month and Fico has said US-based Westinghouse was likely to build a new nuclear power plant.

 


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UK minister warns Iran crisis could last months

LONDON, ‌March 5 : British foreign ​office minister Hamish Falconer said on Thursday there ‌were ‌indications the ​Iranian ‌crisis ⁠could ​run into ⁠weeks or possibly months.
“The situation ⁠is evolving, ‌but ‌there ​are ‌indications ‌that this is a crisis, not ‌of days, but of weeks ⁠and ⁠possibly months,” Falconer told parliament.