Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban offered last year to help Russian President Vladimir Putin “in any way”, such as by hosting a summit in Budapest to settle the war in ​Ukraine, Bloomberg News reported, citing the transcript of a phone call.

A Hungarian government ‌spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment and for the release of the transcript of an October 17 call between the two leaders reviewed by Bloomberg but not verified by Reuters.

There was no ​immediate comment from the Kremlin.

Orban, a eurosceptic nationalist in power since 2010, faces his toughest ​re-election bid of the past 16 years on April 12.

Orban has fostered warm ⁠ties with Putin despite the Ukraine war, and maintained Hungary’s heavy reliance on Russian oil ​and gas. Citing a dispute with Kyiv over a war-damaged oil pipeline, Orban has also blocked the ​implementation of a European Union loan to Ukraine agreed back in December.

The cordial conversation between Orban and Putin took place as U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to a second summit on the war in Ukraine to ​be hosted in the Hungarian capital.

In the phone call, Orban calls Putin a friend, noting that ​their close ties date back to a 2009 meeting in St Petersburg.

“But yesterday our friendship rose to such ‌a ⁠high level that I can help in any way — there is a story in our Hungarian picture books where a mouse helps a lion,” he tells Putin according to the transcript. “I am ready to help immediately … In any matter where I can be of assistance, I am at your service.”

Putin ​tells Orban in response ​that he values ⁠their relations highly and says Budapest would be what he described as “perhaps the only European country that is an acceptable venue” for a possible ​meeting with Trump.

Hungary at the time said it would ensure that Putin, ​who faces ⁠an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court, which Orban’s government is in the process of leaving, could enter the country for a summit with the U.S. president.

Putin also tells Orban that he ⁠greatly appreciates ​his “independent and flexible” stance on the Ukraine crisis.

The publication ​of the transcript follows the release of an audio clip by an investigative news outlet that featured Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter ​Szijjarto and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov discussing EU sanctions.

Via Reuters