Defence

Serbia, Hungary deepen defence, energy ties

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Serbian Defence Minister Bratislav Gasic and Hungarian Defence Minister Kristof Szalay-Bobrovniczky signed a bilateral military cooperation agreement in Belgrade on Tuesday, 1 April.

The agreement sets out 79 joint activities, including helicopter drills, cybersecurity collaboration, and coordinated military training programmes.

Szalay-Bobrovniczky described the scale of cooperation as “unprecedented”, as regional alignments shift in the Western Balkans, adding that Hungary would support the modernisation of Serbia’s armed forces. Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said at the signing ceremony that the pact aimed to establish “the closest strategic relations in the field of defence” and raised the possibility of a future military alliance.

Analysts said while the pact represents a significant step in military cooperation, it does not constitute a formal alliance. Hungary remains bound by NATO obligations, while Serbia continues to resist joining the alliance. Regardless, the agreement signals tightening defence links between two of the most Russia-friendly governments in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE).

Vucic framed the deal as a response to what he called rising regional threats, citing the 18 March declaration of trilateral defence cooperation between Albania, Croatia and Kosovo, signed in the Albanian capital of Tirana. The Serbian premier described the agreement among the NATO-aligned countries as “a direct threat to peace and stability” in the Balkans.

The defence pact expands years of deepening political and economic cooperation between Hungary and Serbia under Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Vucic. The two leaders have developed close ties across energy, infrastructure and migration policy.

Cross-border oil pipeline gains momentum

The day after the defence pact was signed, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto confirmed that Hungary and Serbia are moving ahead with a long-planned cross-border oil pipeline aimed at boosting regional energy security and reducing Serbia’s reliance on crude imports via Croatia.

Szijjarto announced progress on the project during a 2 April visit to Belgrade, where he met with Serbian Energy Minister Dubravka Dedovic Handanovic. The new pipeline will connect Hungary’s Danube refinery in Szazhalombatta, central Hungary, with refineries in Novi Sad and Pancevo, north Serbia.

Szijjarto said the line would have the capacity to transport 4-5mn tonnes of crude oil annually, fully meeting Serbia’s import needs. Construction is expected to begin in late 2025 or early 2026, with operations starting by 2028.

The Hungarian section of the pipeline will span 190km and cost an estimated HUF 130bn (EUR 324mn). MOL, Hungary’s state-backed energy group, has completed a feasibility study and received government approval for the project. The Serbian stretch will be 113km long and cost around EUR 150mn.

The project follows a 2022 bilateral agreement to develop an alternative supply route for Serbia, which currently imports crude primarily via the JANAF pipeline through Croatia. The new route would enable Serbia to tap into Hungary’s connection to the Druzhba pipeline.

CET Editor

Recent Posts

Vucic names academic as PM candidate, as demonstrators take protest to Strasbourg

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic nominated political newcomer Duro Macut, a 62-year-old endocrinologist and university professor,…

5 days ago

CEE markets plunge on Trump tariffs shock

Stock markets in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) fell sharply after US President Donald Trump…

5 days ago

Krakow layoffs reflect broader shift to AI, automation in CEE

The city of Krakow, south Poland, saw nearly 1,900 group layoffs in the first quarter…

5 days ago

Far-right candidate leads in polls ahead of Romania presidential election rerun

Romania will hold fresh presidential elections on 4 May, after its Constitutional Court annulled November's…

5 days ago

Trump’s time bomb just exploded – oped

Trying to figure out the rationale behind Trump’s “trade revolution”?  Don’t bother, there isn’t one.…

1 week ago

Liberation Day: the end of ‘America First’ – oped

Liberation Day is here. Trump has announced his tariffs targeting the US’s biggest trading partners,…

1 week ago