KEY POINTS
  • Hungary's foreign minister said Tuesday that any move to decouple, or even derisk, from China would be an act of "suicide" for Europe.
  • "Both decoupling and de-risking would be a suicide committed by the European economy," Szijjártó told Sam Vadas at the World Economic Forum's annual conference in Tianjin, China.
  • European leaders have until now struggled to formulate a unified Sino-European strategy, with some states echoing U.S. calls for a complete dissociation with Beijing.
European leaders have struggled to formulate a unified Sino-European strategy, with some states echoing U.S. calls for a complete disassociation — or decoupling — while others have preferred a softer, derisking approach.

Hungary's foreign minister said Tuesday that any move to decouple, or even de-risk, from China would be an act of "suicide" for Europe.

Péter Szijjártó said that curtailing ties with Beijing — one of Europe's biggest trade partners and a major source of foreign direct investment — would essentially kill the region's economy.