Leftist environments specialized in accusing everyone around Russian influences. In the meantime, as the case of Pablo Gonzalez, a.k.a. Pawel Rubcov, has shown, 1 of the most crucial agents of the Kremlowska verchuszko worked without hindrance. Well... no surprise.
As part of the exchange of prisoners of war agreed with Washington, Moscow demanded the expulsion of the prisoner in Poland on suspicion of the espionage of Paweł Rubcov, claiming to be a Spanish writer and war correspondent.
In the course of its activities since 2016 Rubcow was known to Madrid journalists, European think-tank, Russian opposition but above all to the Polish left-liberal salon. He supported LGBT+ and illegal migration, supported the Women's Strike and attacked the Polish Church. "Polish Catholicism enters women's bodies. For months Poland has been experiencing a fierce confrontation between government and women. The reason is the improvement of abortion law," he wrote for the Portuguese portal Público.
He was interviewed by leading Polish homoactivist Bart Staszewski. Rubcow advertised his girlfriend's brother's surviving room, who offered free lightning tattoos. In 1 choir with “Legal Humanities”, the artists' environment and the opposition at the time supported illegal migration in the Belarusian section. The texts of his co-authorship were published even in the pages Common Week.
The beginning of anti-Polish, he accused our country of imperialist aspirations. According to Twitter user John Bingham, Rubcow wrote in abroad press that Poland “is seeking to grow its Lifespace (sic!), whose dream is simply a country from sea to sea, from the Baltic to the Black Sea." He besides argued that in the 1920s and 1930s the reborn Republic of Poland led a "aggressive policy, attacking the young russian Russia, occupying any of its Baltic cities", and that the re-emergence on the planet map owes Stalin and the Red Army.
In Rubców's flat and his Polish girlfriend, meetings were held regularly for friendly journalists, during which they could charge their laptops and phones, without knowing about the weaknesses and scandals of the Civic Platform. Ultimately, at the top of Moscow's want list, a man left Poland with immense resources of knowledge. On his way out at St. Petersburg Airport, dressed in a Star Wars T-shirt with the slogan "imperium needs you", he sledmowskily let go of his eye to the camera and squeezed Putin hard.
“Get the thief!”
However, more than the spy itself, the full scandal talks about leftist environments that sought out Putin's tentacles in all conservative and right-wing initiatives. In this role, Clementina Suchanov, for example, was perfectly fulfilled, replicating obsessive inflections about the financing by Kreml Ordo Iuris.
The fact that the leader of the Women's Strike, even though she wrote the full book on the subject, was incapable to supply any proof of specified dependence in a 40-minute conversation with Radosław Sikorski, is useful for this. Finally, the irritated leader cut the subject, stating that the Kremlin's backing "may be part of an exaggeration" or "remains in the sphere of conjecture".
Meanwhile, the “specialists” from tracking down the Russian agentship, were incapable to sniff out a spire operating just under their own noses. Moreover, erstwhile a fewer days after the Russian invasion, Rubcow was arrested and transferred to Poland, a rainbow environment, Electoral Newspapers Or the lightnings protested jointly. In the defence of Gonzalez-Rubców, Staszewski, Anna Mierzyńska, the current expert of the Centre for investigation on Disinformation (sic!), Jan Piński, Piotr Niemczyk, Mariusz Kowalski and many others, stood.
Instead of getting water in their mouths, any curious – like Bart Staszewski – decided to explain their relation with Rubcov, even more compromising. Obama Foundation scholarship holder explained that Gonzalez was 1 of the hundreds of journalists he gave an interview to and spies... "they don't look like James Bond." Well, let us not require vigilance from the environments specialised in reporting on Poland, which from the acquisition of abroad grants created a way of life.
Where are the agents hiding?
As Mr Bartosz Lewandowski recalled, behind Tsar Russia the practice of Russian agentry was to maximize stigmatize dangerous opponents with a patch of “rusophiles”, “Russian agents”, and in a newer version of “Russian onuc”, as well as “Putins”.
"This is simply a classical distraction from agential activities under the appearance of 'doing good', 'pro-democratic' or 'legal man'," he stressed. "The real Russian agent (...) has very frequently the face of a smiling politician fighting for human rights and fighting against “populism”, he added.
At this point, it is impossible to callback the character of Yuri Bezmenov, a GRU officer who fled to the United States in the 1970s, where under the pseudonym Thomas Schuman revealed the ark of russian information war art. "Diversion in russian terminology always means diverting attention from hostile activities undertaken to destruct an enemy country," he said in a celebrated lecture "How to Assault the State?". "Diversant is simply a student from global exchange, diplomat, actor, artist, or...journalist," he said almost 50 years ago.
But, as Bezmienow emphasized, the diversion simply distracts from the process of destabilising the state, consisting in hitting its foundations themselves; social ties, religion, household and military. Who, but in the function of “usable idiots” specialists in “human rights”, black umbrellas, sex educators, and migration activists do as small as anyone.
Meanwhile, Rubcov's case is, as erstwhile head of the Intelligence Agency said, Colonel Grzegorz Małecki, "only the tip of the iceberg". Russia may have many more agents placed in Poland. Where? Let's say diplomaticly: I don't know, but I guess.
Peter Relich
We urge PCh24TV movie productions taking on Russian subject and showing the real face of our east neighbour – “All the Masks of the Kremlin. Has Russia converted?” and “The Nation. Hostile takeover’