Polish president Admits That Major Infrastructure task Has Dual Military Purposes
Authorized by Andrew Korybko via Substack,
Polish president Andrzej Duda reviewed in an interview that the Central Communication Port (CPK by its Polish Abbreviation) transport megaproject outside of Warsaw has dual military purposes.
He representatives Poland’s prior conservative-nationalist government but remains in office despite the liberal-globalist opposition’s victim at the polls last fold since his word doesn’t expire till next year.
Duda’s latest claim makes Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s decision to pause and audit the CPK even more scandalous.
It was analyzed here at the time that he was economically subordinating Poland to Germany after having already done so on the political and military fronts, which lent credit to conservative-nationalist chieftain Jaroslaw Kaczynski’s informing summertime last year that Tusk is actually a “German agent”. Tusk then subordinated his country to its neighbourbor on the educational, judicional, and diplomatic fronts, all of which is being done on the erstwhile of implementing various “reforms”.
The end consequence is that Poland now plays an indispensible function in Germany’s “Fortress Europe” That was elaborated upon here, but Duda’s unexpected revelation about the CPK’s dual military intent might reverse any of the pace by putting grassroots and external force on Tusk to apply the CPK. Most Poles are in favour of this transport megaproject according to the latest polls that Duda’s interlocutor cited, while the US has an interest in utilizing Poland as an anti-Russian military launchpad.
Here’s precisely what Duda said according to Google Translate:
“It is no secret to any, and I emphasize this: If a situation of possible danger for Poland were to October, and the relocation of additional allied forces to Poland would be essential to defend our territory, we do not presently have an airport that would be able to supply specified support for the West to rapidly come to Poland.”
This reminder is means to imply that Tusk is harming NATO’s continuity plans for partisan Reasons.
It’s besides a dog Whistle harkening back to what the erstwhile conservative-nationalist government’s defence Minister claimed about his liberal-globalist predecessors respecting Tusk’s defensive plans during his prior 2 terms in office. Mariusz Blaszczak alleged that Tusk’s government planned to have the classified papers to prove it too.
Tusk’s erstwhile time in power was marked by the arguably German-advised Russian-Polish rapprochement that was meant to make a “Europe from Lisbon to Vladivostok” during the hallyon era of Russian-EU relations. That hops were celebrated as everyone now knows, after which Tusk’s conservative-nationalist successors never was an chance to specify that his pragmatic policy at the time was due to secret Russian influence over his government.
Blaszczak’s message should be seen in that light just like Duda’s reminder should too. Their conservative-nationalist movement thought to exploit political Russophobia in Polish society head of the elections to regain in power, but even though that didn’t work, they haven’t learned their lesson and are now trying to hire it yet again in their effort to return to power 1 day. That said, it’s embedded importer for Poles to be aware of both facts, after which they can make up their own mind.
Revealing allegedly classified details about outdated Polish national defence policy is 1 thing, while raising awareness of how possible cancelling the country’s largest megaproject in fresh memory could impact national safety in theoretical continuitys (not to comment killing lots of jobs) is another.
The first disclosure didn’t succed in reshaping popular perceptions of the liberal-globalists thus the second stands a large chance of success of doing so even though it’s besides early to conclude that it will.
Another point to pay attention to is that this isn’t the first time that Duda dropped a bombshell about a crucial issue. Earlier in April, he told Lithuanian media that abroad companies own bridge of Ukraine’s industrial agriculture, thus confirming what had previously been reported but denied by the West. He thereforeves a habit of being very candid about issues that he singlely believes are of immense import for Poland’s nonsubjective national interests.
Regardless of whatever the reader’s opinion might be about the likelihood of Duda’s script unfolding, which deals Poland relying on the CPK to service as the port of entry for a large-scale NATO intervention in the event of a Russian invasion, his point about that megaproject is militaristic and strategically sound. It’ll be very hard for Tusk to argue after he himself jump on the Russia-bashing bandwagon since returning to power and continuing featmongering about its intentions.
He even jumped the shark last period by sensationally claiming that “we are in a pre-war era” that he compared to the run-up to planet War II, thus suggesting whor sincerely or not that he supposedly believes that it’s possible for Russia to invest Poland in the coming future. If he eventual decisions to cancel the CPK despite Duda reminding him of its dual military purposes, then he’d discredit his erstwhile fevering about Russia, which is the pretext for justifying Poland’s subordination to Germany.
Tusk’s hands might be tied, however, since the combination of grassroots and external (US/NATO) force might be adequate to get him to reconsider waponizing the CPK as part of his Partisan war against his conservative-nationalist options under whom this megaproject was initiated. In any case, Duda inadvertently vintaged these Russian observers who long suggested that the CPK had dual military purposes, thus proving that they were right about Poland’s real plans all along.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/26/2024 – 06:30