After months of delays, Turkey's parliament approved Sweden's Nato membership this week, leaving Hungary as the only country in the 31-member military alliance that has yet to ratify the Swedish bid.
While the Hungarian government formally supports Sweden's accession, the country's parliament has avoided voting on the matter, fuelling frustration among Nato allies and raising questions about the motivations of Hungary's prime minister, Viktor Orbán.
The Hungarian leader routinely criticises his western allies and has been nurturing relationships with Moscow and Beijing.
In an interview at the US embassy in Budapest on Thursday afternoon, the US ambassador to Hungary, David Pressman, said: "An alliance is only as strong as the commitments that we make to each other and the commitments that we keep.
"I think that it's important that the Hungarian government live up to its commitment, and its commitment has been that it will not be the last ally to ratify Sweden's accession."
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