Orban: The Visegrad Group with Serbia and Romania has great potential

Serbia doesn’t belong to the Balkans, but to Central Europe. Hungary’s historical interest is to be with Serbia in the same political and economic union.
Pointing out that “an alternative to globalism exists,” Orban based his plan on five-points. He sees the Central European path as an alliance of independent states represented in the EU by the principle of “one nation – one voice” connected together in the protection of Christian culture, traditional family, national economy, and in the refusal of mass immigration.
Orban believes that the political focus should move towards Central Europe, because the West has more problems in the security sense, which affects economic growth and quality of life. The alliance of six countries, which totals 93 million inhabitants, would have significant economic and political potential. Many of those countries have better communication with the new administration in Washington, but also with Moscow, than some of the countries of the “old” Europe. In addition, this group of countries in Europe is the backbone of the great Chinese project “Belt and Road”.
Orban is offering the values that made Europe the way it is – powerful and strong.