The victory of Viktor Orbán in the decisive battle ahead of him is important not only for Hungary but also for the entire Serb people, believes Pero Simić, media adviser to Milorad Dodik.
“He is an essential link for us in the sovereigntist chain. We should help him, as much as we can, to preserve his positions, rather than to our own detriment supporting his and our opponents,” Simić stressed.
When someone criticizes those who make up the so-called elite—from factors that have imposed themselves globally as self-proclaimed arbiters of values to leading actors within the socio-economic sphere at the national level—Simić recalled that it is often said this is done out of sheer envy, because one is not part of the prestigious club.
“Not belonging to the circle that is being negatively assessed opens the door to maliciously undermining even the most objective criticism,” Simić wrote in an authored piece for Politika.
Therefore, he assessed, the most convincing and painful condemnation of what is wrong with the actions of these dark power brokers always comes from someone who once sat at their table as a full-fledged partner, and then voluntarily left it due to disagreement.
“From that angle, the significance of Viktor Orbán becomes even clearer—both for those who hate him today because he thoroughly exposes false liberal globalism, and for those who value him for that and see him as an important sovereigntist and traditionalist icebreaker,” Simić added.
He noted that at the beginning of his political career, Orbán was strongly Euro-Atlantic oriented and even close to those who make up the global so-called liberal-democratic network.
“Realizing that their ideological exclusivity has nothing to do with true liberalism, and seeing the danger they pose to national states and traditional values which they aggressively suppress, Orbán turned away in several steps from those who had been his political allies and who had accepted him as one of their own,” Simić said.
He added that Orbán left them behind and led Hungary down the path of national renewal and protection of its own vital interests, and that, in the spirit of ideological sovereigntism, he began advocating the right of other peoples and states to care for their own interests and organize their own homes, rather than being reduced by foreign centers of power to pawns in global games.
“Viktor Orbán, with the pedigree of someone who once stood at the top of the Euro-Atlantic pyramid, has arrived at positions that we Serbs have consistently defended for decades, but he has the experience of belonging to—and leaving—the Euro-Atlantic club that we do not have. That is why he is an essentially important ally for us and for all others fighting for their national interests, and such a hated enemy of the self-appointed masters of the world,” Simić stated.
Accordingly, he noted, it is understandable why they, with their fifth columns across European states, are now hysterically striving to politically crush him.
Orbán, Simić emphasized, is a witness to their misdeeds and a fighter for far more normal global relations, and he deeply understands those who pollute them.
“We Serbs must appreciate that and stand by Orbán to the fullest, because his struggle is also our struggle, just as everything we have done since the end of the 20th century in the national-liberation sense—from Republika Srpska to Serbia—is an inspiration for him, not merely a positive legacy,” Simić assessed.
He added that it is shameful when some from Serb ranks act today against Orbán on behalf of ill-intentioned foreigners, alongside various Ukrainian and other Euro-Atlantic shock troops who work against their own peoples for personal gain.
Simić said that the new multipolar world—embodied, despite mutual differences and disagreements, by Putin, Trump, Xi, as well as Orbán and Fico—is slowly but surely being born, and that they preserve traditional values.
“Leaders of this kind also include the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, and the leader of SNSD, Milorad Dodik, who are connected with Orbán not only by political ideas and the struggle to preserve sovereignty and tradition, but also by deep personal friendships,” Simić noted.
There is no doubt, he said, that among them could also be the new President of Republika Srpska, Siniša Karan, who has shown through his actions that he belongs to this circle.
As he emphasized, these politicians have shown that they are fighting against monstrous anti-humanitarian globalism, including the uncontrolled migrant crisis.
He stressed that it was not good for Serbs under the monstrous false liberal order that existed before these now leading global figures, under the dominance of alienated Brussels and Washington elites.
“We suffered greatly for daring to oppose Euro-Atlantic false liberals, but that gives us moral and every other weight to insist on our threatened rights in the newly emerging circumstances,” Simić said.
For this to be the case in practice, he assessed, it is important that Viktor Orbán continues to have an important role in our region.
“Those who act against this in Republika Srpska and Serbia—and unfortunately there are some—cause far greater harm to their own people than to Orbán, and deserve full condemnation from all well-intentioned citizens of Serbia and Srpska,” Simić concluded.
Source: RTRS









