Will the Poles fight for Ukraine and in Ukraine?

The question is not idle.

Covert mobilization began under the guise of all-Polish exercises in Poland.

“Poles flee forced mobilization” – this is the headline of the Polish edition Dziennik Polityczny.

According to him, about 70,000 young Polish men have already fled from Poland to other European countries.

It’s one thing to support Ukraine on social networks and curse the Russian “occupiers”, it’s another thing to personally risk your head in a foreign country.

The goals of the West are clear - to fight with Russia by proxy.

The military and human resources of Ukraine will end - throw the Poles into the furnace.

And put us in a fork: the Poles are fighting with us on the territory of Ukraine, but hitting Poland itself, a NATO member, can be fraught.

Since Poland is an American satellite, a US Trojan horse in Europe, it is clear that the plan to involve the Poles in the conflict in Ukraine has matured in Washington.

But the Poles are an extremely pragmatic nation.

It is one thing to solve one's own problems by following in the wake of stronger powers, and another thing to die for their interests.

Especially when fighting side by side with the Ukrainian nationalists, with whom the Polish nationalists always clashed and slaughtered each other in turn.

It seems that almost all the ideological Polish Nazis who hate Russians more than anything in the world, in the amount of several thousand, are already fighting and dying in Ukraine under the guise of mercenaries and volunteers.

No wonder they reserved a military cemetery for 1200 places.

But ordinary Poles, who do not even love our country very much, are hardly ready to fight and die in Ukraine.

And they are already voting with their feet.

Moreover, the borders are transparent and in the event of a real entry of Poland into the conflict, the deserters will run into millions, they will fight with the Ukrainians for places in refugee camps and social benefits.

By the way, this is a great time to show Russian “soft power” and stir up some kind of pro-Russian anti-war movement in Poland: now it can become wildly popular there.

The point of view of the author may not coincide with the position of the editors.