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Thursday, November 13, 2025

Slovakia’s Robert Fico visits Putin in Moscow amid Ukraine gas dispute

Fico is the third EU leader, after Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, to meet with Putin since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico visited the Kremlin on Sunday, in only the third trip by a leader of an EU member state since Russia’s all-out invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Fico’s trip to Russia comes after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán visited Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow earlier this year. In April 2022, just weeks after the invasion of Ukraine, Austria’s Chancellor Karl Nehammer met Putin in the Russian capital.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Fico arrived in Russia on a “working visit” and met with Putin one-on-one on Sunday evening. He did not immediately specify the focus of the talks.

Slovakian PM’s visit follows the recent escalation of a long-running dispute between Fico and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy over the Ukrainian leader’s decision to completely stop the transit of Russian gas through Ukrainian territory after the end of 2024.

Slovakia, a landlocked country, remains highly dependent on Russian gas, which it gets from Gazprom, the state-owned monopoly, through a pipeline throughout Ukraine.

“If anyone is going to prevent the transit of gas to the territory of the Slovak Republic, if anyone is going to cause an increase in gas prices on the territory of Europe, if anyone is going to cause enormous economic damage to the European Union, it is President Zelenskyy,” Fico said in a press conference at the end of a one-day summit of EU leaders in Brussels earlier this month.

“He has a right to be nervous. I would not want to be in his shoes because the country is struggling,” he added, insisting Slovakia would never allow Ukraine to join NATO.

Visits and phone calls from European leaders to Putin have been rare since Moscow sent troops into Ukraine.

Orbán’s July visit drew widespread condemnation from both Kyiv and European leaders, and the Hungarian prime minister is widely seen as having the warmest relations with Putin among EU leaders.

He has routinely blocked, delayed or watered down Brussels’ efforts to assist Kyiv and impose sanctions on Moscow for its actions in Ukraine.

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