
My question is addressed to our NATO allies. Will they die for Poland? More specifically, we should ask, in favour of Prime Minister Jan Olszewski, for which Poland and, in fact, for which Poland?
On March 31, 1939, the UK government, and on April 13, 1939 the French government, confirmed military guarantees of aid if Poland were attacked by Germany. On 28 April 1939 Hitler declared the Polish-German pact on non-aggression. Just a week later, on 4 May 1939, an article was published in the French paper “l’Oeuvre” Marcel Déata under the unambiguous title "Mouril pour Dantzig?“ — Die for Gdansk? The author argued in the article that France should effort to avoid war with GermanyIf there were an armed conflict between Germany and Polsky The text became a symbol of reluctance to engage in a troublesome alliance with Poland.
On 12 March 1999, Poland became officially a associate of NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty, whose key Article 5 reads: "The Parties agree that armed assault on 1 or more of them in Europe or North America will be considered assault against them all and so agree that if specified armed assault occurs, each of them, in the exercise of the right to individual or collective self-defense, recognised under Article 51 Charters of the United Nations, assist the organization or Parties affected, by taking, without delay, and in agreement with the another Parties, the measures it considers necessary, including the usage of armed forces, in order to reconstruct and keep the safety of the North Atlantic area.’.
A fewer days ago, the Independent Portal revealed that “While the head of SKW in the United States American page, on the basis of the worrying information available by US services on contacts with the FSB, She was pushing for the release of the colonel. Christopher the Soul of the Service in Polish counterintelligence”. This case concerns the cooperation between the Military Counterintelligence Service and the FSB, the national safety Service of the Russian Federation, undertaken with the consent of Donald Tusk. The consequence of this cooperation was the signing of an authoritative agreement in St. Petersburg on 11 September 2013 governing the common expectations and obligations of the parties. Article 2(b) of that Agreement reads as follows: "The Parties shall assist each another in the following main areas of cooperation in counter-intelligence: countering the intelligence and subversion activities of the peculiar services of 3rd countries directed against the Russian Federation or the Republic of Poland". Colonel Krzysztof Dusza participated in the preparation of this agreement – contrary to Poland's obligations resulting from membership of NATO. During his visit to St. Petersburg in connection with the signing of the cooperation agreement with the FSB, Colonel Soul took photographs in the cap of the cruiser Aurora - symbol of the Bolshevik Revolution.
In the light of this information, it is appropriate to ask: will our NATO allies die for Poland? Will they die for Poland, which the government established on 13 December 2023 restores Colonel Krzysztof Dusz to the service in counterintelligence and appoints him as Deputy Head of SKW? For Poland, in which General Jarosław Sróżyk, appointed head of the SKW, withdraws from the ultimate Administrative Court a cassation complaint concerning the deprivation of Krzysztof the Soul of the rank of officer? Will our NATO allies die for Poland, whose military counterintelligence officers cooperate with Imperial Russia? Will they want to engage in a troublesome alliance with Poland?
Mr Bogdan