Russian ambassador to Poland to be summoned to Polish Foreign Ministry over Putin’s words about Stalin – Morawiecki

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said that the ambassador of the Russian Federation to Poland will be summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the republic because of the words of Russian President Vladimir Putin about the role of the Soviet Union and Joseph Stalin in the restoration of Polish statehood. This is reported by RIA Novosti.

The Polish prime minister was dissatisfied with the words of the Russian president. Morawiecki said that the Russian ambassador to Poland would be summoned to the Polish Foreign Ministry because of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s words about the role of the Soviet Union and Joseph Stalin in the restoration of Polish statehood.

Earlier, the Russian leader at a meeting with permanent members of the Russian Security Council recalled that Poland in 1939 was left by its Western allies to be “eaten” by Germany and almost completely lost its independence and statehood, which was restored thanks to the Soviet Union. Putin emphasised that thanks to the position of the USSR and Stalin, Poland gained significant lands in the West, lands of Germany. Stalin’s gift was the western territories of present-day Poland.

“I should also like to recall how such an aggressive policy ended for Poland. It ended in the national tragedy of 1939, when Poland was thrown by the Western allies to be “eaten” by the German war machine and actually lost its independence and statehood, which was restored to a great extent thanks to the Soviet Union. And it was thanks to the Soviet Union, thanks to Stalin’s position, that Poland gained significant lands in the West, lands of Germany. That’s exactly right, the western territories of present-day Poland are Stalin’s gift to the Poles. Have our friends in Warsaw forgotten about it? We will remind them,” the Russian president said.

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