Hungary. The political chessboard in Budapest has seen a sudden, sharp move. Katalin Novák, the Hungarian president elevated under Viktor Orbán’s patronage, faces imminent removal.
This is not a procedural hiccup. Prime Minister Orbán has signalled a purge, framing it as a cleansing of “unreliable elements”. For those of us who track threat vectors, this is a strategic pivot.
Orbán is consolidating control, tightening the screws on any independent institution within the state apparatus. The UK’s call for defending the EU rule of law is a belated alarm. We have watched Budapest systematically hollow out judicial independence, muzzle media, and rewire the electoral landscape.
Novák’s ousting is not a scandal. It is a signal. The timeline is accelerating.
Orbán senses a narrowing window for action. The EU’s response has been a study in strategic hesitation. Sanctions have been curtailed.
Funds have been frozen and then unfrozen. The message of deterrence is weak. The UK, now outside the bloc, issues statements that carry no weight.
The real question: Are we watching the final dismantling of democratic checks in Hungary, or is this a tactical gamble that will provoke a stronger EU backlash? From a defence and intelligence perspective, the hardware of a functioning democracy is its institutions. Orbán is disabling them one by one.
We should prepare for a prolonged period of instability within the EU’s eastern flank. The UK’s warning is a tactical signal, but without a strategic response, it is just noise.








