I would rate this claim as misleading. It’s true that Gergely Gulyás, a Hungarian government official, reportedly made a statement suggesting that an attack on the TurkStream pipeline could be seen as an attack on a NATO country. However, the way this post presents it is really oversimplified and kind of exaggerates what’s actually known.
When I looked into it, most of the reporting about this “attack” comes from Russian officials, who claimed that Ukrainian drones targeted a compressor station connected to TurkStream and that the attack was stopped. But there isn’t strong independent confirmation from other reliable sources like NATO, Turkey, or major international organizations saying that this was a confirmed or serious attack on NATO infrastructure. For example, Reuters reported the incident as a claim from Russia, not something that has been fully verified.
Also, the idea that this would automatically count as a NATO attack is misleading. NATO doesn’t just treat something as an attack because one politician says so. Article 5, which is about collective defense, would require agreement from all NATO members, and it’s applied on a case-by-case basis. There’s no evidence that NATO has officially treated this situation that way.
Another important thing is the source itself. The post links to a Bluesky account, which isn’t a verified news outlet and doesn’t provide strong evidence or multiple sources. That makes it even more important to double-check the claim with more reliable reporting.
Overall, the claim takes a real quote but removes context and makes it sound like a confirmed, serious NATO-level incident when that’s not supported by the available evidence.