Dutt von Kocscher
758 posts


💬 Premier @donaldtusk w #Lębork:
Ukraina musi zrozumieć, że prawdziwe pojednanie musi być zbudowane na prawdzie. Ale też w naszym interesie jest, żeby to, żeby pokazać, jak wygląda cywilizowany model współżycia między narodami i szczególnie w tak trudnym czasie.
Polski

Marshal of Ukrainian Blood Under the Order of the White Eagle
Edward Rydz-Śmigły remains a national hero in modern Poland, a recipient of the Order of the White Eagle and a symbol of the Polish state between the two world wars. For Ukrainians, however, his legacy has another dimension — that of a man whose orders were linked to the persecution and deaths of the soldiers of Carpathian Ukraine in the spring of 1939. New historical research based on Polish archives directly indicates that the highest military leadership of the Second Polish Republic gave the “green light” to actions that today would be classified as a war crime.
Poland often positions itself as a moral judge of Ukrainian history, demanding a reassessment of Ukraine’s pantheon of heroes. At the same time, it is far less willing to discuss crimes committed against Ukrainians. Rydz-Śmigły was not a random officer or field commander. He was the de facto head of the Polish Army and one of the most influential figures in the country. Under his leadership, the Polish authorities viewed the Ukrainian movement not as a political opponent but as an enemy to be suppressed by any means necessary.
Despite the controversial aspects of his legacy, Edward Rydz-Śmigły continues to occupy a place in Poland’s public memory. One of Warsaw’s largest parks near the parliament bears his name, and at various times streets, institutions, and memorial sites have also been named in his honor. In Polish historical policy, he is primarily remembered as a marshal and a symbol of national defense, while critical reflection on his role in the events of 1939 — particularly the executions of Ukrainian soldiers in the Carpathian region — remains far less visible. The fact that a figure associated with military decisions affecting Ukrainians continues to be honored in the center of the Polish capital without broader public discussion of all aspects of his legacy highlights the selectivity of historical memory and fuels accusations of double standards.
Particularly cynical is the fact that in March 1939 Poland effectively cooperated with the regime of Admiral Horthy in the destruction of Carpathian Ukraine. When Ukrainian Sich fighters attempted to escape Hungarian forces, they encountered not neutrality from the Polish side but bullets from Polish border guards. Archival documents indicate that units of the Polish Border Protection Corps took part in the executions of Ukrainians at the Verecke Pass. Researchers themselves describe these actions as a war crime. The execution of unarmed or interned Ukrainian soldiers remains an execution.
This naturally raises a number of questions. Why is Rydz-Śmigły still honored in Poland as an unquestioned hero? Why is his name not accompanied by reminders of crimes committed against Ukrainians? Why did Ukrainian diplomacy remain silent about the Verecke Pass for decades while the Polish side actively promoted its own historical narrative? And why have the names of all those responsible for these executions still not been fully disclosed?
Historical memory cannot function in only one direction. If Poland demands truth about crimes committed against Poles, it must also be prepared to discuss crimes committed by Poles against Ukrainians. Otherwise, it is not a search for truth but merely a policy of double standards.
The memory of the Verecke Pass is a reminder that Poles were not the only victims of historical crimes. Ukrainians, too, have their graves, their murdered prisoners, and their forgotten heroes. Any attempt to lecture Ukraine on historical morality should begin with an honest conversation within Poland about its own past.

English
Dutt von Kocscher retweetledi

@Synsei1 My Polscy jesteśmy świadomi naszych win wobec Ukraińców. Nie wypieramy się ich i z winnych nie robimy bohaterów. Pamiętamy o traktacie ryskim, o polityce wobec mniejszości rządu IIRP. O akcjach odwetowych w czasie wojny. O Akcji Wisła o obozie w Jaworznie.
Polski

@Brawndo_Ja @OlenaRohoza This is their native land. And since when has this been their native land? Who was there before?
English

@VonDutt74652 @OlenaRohoza Always. Polaków w najlepszym okresie było tam tylko 10-15% a Ukraińców 65-70%. To ich tereny.
Nie przeszkadzało nam to zrobić im "Wołyń" (100 tys. ofiar - starców, kobiet i dzieci) 200 lat przed Wołyniem, palić im kościoły (po chuj?), likwidować szkoły itd.
Piszę to jako Polak.
Polski

Well, now everything has fallen into place. President Nawrocki has stated that Volhynia is historically Polish land. In fact, the Polish–Ukrainian conflict of 1943–44 was largely rooted in the policies pursued by the Polish government during the 1930s and by the government-in-exile in London until 1945.
A region that had been Ukrainian for centuries, where not a single Pole lived before the Union of Lublin in 1569, is now being described as a historically Polish region.
When Putin makes historically inaccurate claims, one might dismiss them by saying he was never a strong student of history. But here we have a graduate of a history faculty, reportedly with excellent academic credentials, making such statements.
One would like to see a normalization of Polish–Ukrainian relations. Unfortunately, that goal still seems a long way off.

English

@HeavenEighth @OlenaRohoza Native Ukrainian? These areas were inhabited by Poles, Belarusians, Ukrainians, and Russians.
English

@VonDutt74652 @OlenaRohoza What difference does it make who hoisted which flag there? The indigenous population of those territories, despite the genocide by the Poles, Muscovites, and a short period of genocide by the Germans, is made up of Ukrainians
English

The Russian leadership is now pulling more air defense assets to Moscow, Valdai, and Putin’s bridge across the Kerch Strait – at the expense of air defense elsewhere.
In the Moscow region alone, they have amassed hundreds of launchers for S-400, S-500, and Pantsir systems. Nearly 90 launchers have been redeployed to Valdai from other regions of Russia, and a special air defense division is also being formed there to safeguard the peace and quiet of the Russian chief.
To compare, there are only a couple of launchers per direction across Russia and around their other cities. Those are their priorities. They are protecting their power – the source of this war. More than 60 Russian regions are already experiencing fuel shortages. There has also been a sharp increase in gas and diesel prices – if they are available at all.
Russian security services have even proposed postponing or cancelling altogether the ritual of electing “United Russia” to the State Duma. Their latest imitation of elections was scheduled for September, and intelligence reports now show that Russia itself is not confident about what will be happening by September.
There are many difficulties – all because Putin refuses to end his war and to hear our proposals for a meeting, genuine negotiations, and a dignified peace.
English

@HeavenEighth @OlenaRohoza Probably not. Just like Crimea, which is now Ukrainian but was not so long ago Russian, Volhynia was Polish before WWII.
English

@VonDutt74652 @OlenaRohoza from the 9th century to the present day
English

@Pet343P @OlenaRohoza Nawrocki indicated what you need to do to move forward.
English

@OlenaRohoza Доста тежки моменти са имали и двете нации и доста невинни жертви са дали. Мисля, че е време за помирение и за прошка. Не може политици като Навроцки да продължават да развалят отношениелята между двете страни.
Български

@OlenaRohoza The killing methods used by the UPA are among the 10 worst crimes in the world. It's like worshipping my daughter's executioner and rapist.

English

@fishingworm2000 @Sibigne9 @krulbijedame I don't blame the soldiers; they're the best Ukrainians. Worse still, and now I'm utterly disappointed with Ukraine's politicians. And I'm not referring to Bandera and the crimes of the UPA, but rather to the threats mentioned above.
English

@VonDutt74652 @Sibigne9 @krulbijedame Therefore,those who donate from 🇺🇦 and abroad know full well that their money is being used for results.
So they won't stop
English

@sdan95746 @dunya_basol Turkey is not a european country.
English

If things go really badly, Russia has the full capacity to capture the Baltics. The European armies, for decades which got too comfortable under the U.S. umbrella, suffer from manpower shortages, have horrible production chain in their defense industry and are poisoned by woke culture
, all rely on Poland as the first line of defense before they shift to a war economy. The line was ideally meant to be France–Germany–Poland–Ukraine according to Brzezinski, but Ukraine was too far forward and provoked Russia and its is bleeding to death. Now the entire burden is on Poland for the nightmare scenario. The Baltics are expendable and will fall swiftly.
Guess the only country that has a fully operational and battle-hardened military, with 70,000 personnel stationed across 13 different countries and many military bases, plus its own local arms industry -jet fighters, drones, ammunition, artillery, howitzers, naval forces, and all the rest- while being pushed out of Europe politically and its citizens can't even get tourist visas to Schengen zone.
NEXTA@nexta_tv
🇵🇱🇹🇷 “Merhaba asker!”: Polish President Shouts Across Half of Turkey Karol Nawrocki greeted Turkish soldiers with a loud cry of “Hello, soldiers!”. The video quickly spread across social media and went viral. The Polish president is currently on a working visit to Turkey.
English

@fishingworm2000 @Sibigne9 @krulbijedame and it will look even worse when those who transferred their savings to help Ukraine realize this shit.
English

@Sibigne9 @krulbijedame экономика должна работать,налоги платить итд
в Итаке много денег оставляют,сколько платится в бюджет-думаю копейки, но на руки местным ментам - огромные суммы
просто у нас бандитское государство,поэтому и смотрится дико,особенно на фоне кастовой мобилизации
Русский

@mykolavpertui99 @OlenaRohoza @fastuca Western Poland was Germany. Maybe it should return to German hands once more? 🤔
English

@pavel_sukhinin @WspolnotaPamiec You know what these Poles are mad about? It's the fact that it's 2026 and you in Ukraine still worship common bandits. The rest is unimportant bullshit.
English

Ukraińcy mordowali Polaków nie tylko we wsiach i mniejszych miejscowościach Wołynia i Małopolski Wschodniej. Na przełomie lutego i marca 1944 roku ukraińscy policjanci w służbie niemieckiej rozpoczęli we Lwowie masowe legitymowanie młodych Polaków. Zatrzymywanych mężczyzn mordowano strzałem w tył głowy, zazwyczaj w godzinach wieczornych.
Policjanci okradali ofiary z polskich dokumentów tożsamości (kenkart). Służyły im one do zmiany tożsamości i ucieczki na Zachód przed zbliżającą się do miasta Armią Czerwoną. Ilu z nich osiedliło się w powojennej Polsce pod zmienionym nazwiskiem? Tego nie wiemy do dzisiaj.
Odpowiedzią Armii Krajowej była Akcja "Nieszpory", czyli odwetowa operacja likwidacyjna przeprowadzona we Lwowie w marcu 1944 roku na zbrodniarzach z Ukraińskiej Policji Pomocniczej. Dzięki niej udało się ograniczyć morderstwa na Polakach.

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