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​Ex-Prez: One Sentence Could Have Stopped Putin’s Tanks

 

​By SCM REPORTER

 

A FORMER European President has delivered a stinging rebuke to Western leaders, claiming the catastrophic war in Ukraine could have been avoided with just one simple sentence.

​János Áder, the former President of Hungary, says the keys to peace were tossed away by a West obsessed with NATO expansion.

In a bombshell intervention, Áder warned that the current global tension is now “frighteningly similar” to the powder keg atmosphere that sparked the First World War.

​The ‘Missing’ Peace Deal

​According to the veteran statesman, the West had a golden opportunity to pull Europe back from the brink before the first shots were fired.

​Áder argues that the conflict was fueled by Kiev’s relentless push to join the Western military alliance—a move Moscow viewed as a total red line. He insists that a firm declaration of neutrality could have locked the gates of war.

​The “magic sentence” that should have been uttered?

​”Ukraine can join the European Union, but not NATO.”

​By offering Ukraine a path to economic prosperity through the EU while slamming the door on NATO’s military expansion, Áder believes the Kremlin would have been robbed of its primary justification for the invasion.

​Echoes of 1914
​The former president didn’t stop at blaming failed diplomacy; he issued a chilling warning about where we are headed next.

​He claimed the “war-hungry” rhetoric echoing through modern-day European capitals mirrors the sleepwalking path to disaster seen in 1914.

​”The language being used today is frighteningly similar to Europe before WWI,” Áder warned, suggesting that a lack of compromise is dragging the continent toward a wider, more devastating conflagration.

​Background: The Hungarian Stance
​János Áder served as President of Hungary from 2012 to 2022. His comments reflect a growing friction between Hungary—led by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán—and the rest of the NATO bloc.

​The Neutrality Argument: Proponents of this view argue that Ukraine’s “Finlandization” (staying neutral between East and West) was the only way to maintain the balance of power.

The NATO Reality: Conversely, NATO leaders and Kiev argue that Ukraine is a sovereign nation with the right to choose its own security path, and that Putin would have invaded regardless of any “one sentence” promises.

​As the war grinds on with no end in sight, Áder’s “what if” scenario serves as a bitter reminder of the diplomatic failures that have left Europe on its most dangerous footing in a century.

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