📌 A GROWING RUMOR:
According to information provided by sources within Serbian intelligence, the real aim of Orbán’s “defeat” is for him to become the Trojan horse Donald Trump wants to place at the heart of the European Union.
The US president would like the former Hungarian prime minister to become the next candidate for President of the European Commission, currently led by Ursula von der Leyen. She is managing an increasingly fragile majority and has already survived a vote of no confidence, a sign of deep fractures within the EU institutions.
Trump has more than one trick up his sleeve to discredit von der Leyen, and among them the most serious appears to be the one linked to the Pfizer affair. In addition to deleting several SMS messages exchanged with Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, Ursula allegedly received a huge bribe of $760 million, disguised as a “commission” paid by the above-mentioned pharmaceutical multinational to her husband Heiko. He was “prudently” employed by Orgenesis, which is itself linked to Pfizer.
This is probably the biggest bribe in European history, but the only journalist who exposed it, Romanian Adrian Onciu, lost his job because of it, while his other “colleagues” in the mainstream media are too busy accusing Moscow and Budapest of corruption to look under the Brussels carpet, where it’s crawling with bribes and hidden commissions for various commissioners.
The Pfizer affair, however, is not the only weapon Trump and Orbán have at their disposal.
The former Hungarian prime minister himself compiled an extensive dossier on all the serious financial irregularities in which Ursula von der Leyen is implicated, and submitted it to the European Parliament last August—of course without the media reporting on it.
Orbán focused in particular on the enormous sum from the cohesion fund, which amounted to €392 billion, of which two billion ended up at von der Leyen’s former university, where the President of the European Commission taught epidemiology in the late 1990s.
According to Orbán, von der Leyen committed classic embezzlement of public funds, which were not intended for works and initiatives of any usefulness, but for institutions of all kinds, always connected to herself and to other European commissioners.
The same dynamic allegedly also took place in the financing of the NextGeneration EU, where about €5 billion ended up in various consulting firms in Germany, again linked to the President of the Commission, who in this area is the most generous to herself.
In reality, this is only the tip of the iceberg, the peak of which we are only beginning to glimpse.
Beneath it are other loans, such as those from the infamous PNRR, allocated through fictitious contracts to companies connected to various political parties. Yet the judiciary clearly has no intention of investigating these matters, because if one piece of the puzzle were to fall, all the others would fall in a chain reaction as well.
The euphoria reigning in Brussels may turn into confusion once it becomes clear that nothing has changed in Budapest, while Orbán is now free and can run for the presidency of the European Commission with a suitcase full of documents that reveal the skeletons in Ursula von der Leyen’s closet.
Kirill Dmitriev, a close adviser to Vladimir Putin, apparently understood this when commenting on the results of the Hungarian elections and declaring that these results will only accelerate the fall of the European Union—fragile and isolated.
In both Moscow and Washington, everyone is very well aware of what is going to happen.
In Brussels, by contrast, they celebrated a measure that was supposed to give the EU regime a decisive boost.
The last ones to understand a story are always those who refuse to accept its verdicts.
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