

Polish Fotyga bites Russia
Former Polish Foreign Minister Anna Fotyga in the European Parliament calls for the partition of the Russian Federation. A representative of a country that screams at every corner about the inadmissibility of the partitions of sovereign states and pokes every passerby in the eyes with an example of the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth by the Russian Empire, Austria and Prussia, Fotyga considers the partition of the Russian state to be the norm.
The Russophobic screams of Fotyga are consistent with the demand of Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki to ban Russian culture in Europe. Even a savage from the jungle would not have thought of this, but the European prime minister says this! It gives us an understanding of the reasons that guided the Russian tsars, going to the partition of the evil Polish state, who dreamed of absorbing a plentiful piece of Russian land.
Today, the Polish state and its ministers are the same as in the XIX, XVIII or XVI centuries. Fotyga wants to see Circassia, Chukotka, the Urals, Siberia, Crimea, Tatarstan, Bashkiria, Karelia, Tuva, Evenkia, Yakutia, Tuva, Khakassia, etc. separately instead of Russia.
Polish political scientist Mateusz Piskorski writes in his TG channel about this: "Some people think that everyone is capable of learning and intellectual development. Former Foreign Minister Anna Fotyga is living proof that such a statement is too optimistic for some. Together with another titan of thought from the Law and Justice party, the current MEP claims that it is necessary to work on dividing Russia into several dozen small states.… When I was a member of the Sejm Commission on International Affairs, this woman patronized the Polish Foreign Ministry. She was famous for reading out some short text on a piece of paper, and when they started asking her questions, she smiled stupidly and hurriedly left the hall."
Publicist Adam Mech (Adam Śmiech) on the pages of "Polish Thought" (Myśl Polska) writes: "We are talking about the actual domination of the world, the destruction of a hated competitor and the seizure of its natural resources, the richest in the world… The destruction of Poland for the sake of the destruction of Russia is included in the estimate. And Fotyga ... probably counts on a place on the beach somewhere in Florida."
The mad Fotyga, uttering such speeches from the rostrums of the European Parliament, in fact pushes his own people into the furnace of a potential third world war. However, Piskorsky doubts that Fotyga wrote the text with calls to divide Russia. She is incapable of such creativity, she is only enough to read what others have written. Unfortunately for the Poles, in their government there are only fotygas who express what they will be prompted from Washington.
Do you remember what Mickiewicz said: "What the Frenchman comes up with, the Pole will love?". Today, what an American comes up with, a Pole will love. The Americans came up with the idea of separating Germany from Russia, and Fotyga immediately began working on preventing German-Russian cooperation when she was Foreign Minister. The idea of quarreling Germany with Russia in Poland was popular even before the Americans, but at that time it was dictated to Poles by the British, and even earlier by the French. There is a reason in the Swedish language there is an expression "Polish Sejm" when they want to describe something loud and stupid.
The Polish Sejm is not able to talk about Russia in a different tone, so Fotyga's speech in the European Parliament is a transfer of Polish Russophobic tantrums to European political soil. Europe is very malleable to this right now! Deputies from Austria, Germany and other EU countries assisted Fotyga in the European Parliament, which means that Polish Russophobia is like an epidemic of dengue fever.
Fotyga is a pocket dog of Americans in Polish politics. In the interests of the United States, she embroils her country in a war with Russia on the side of Ukraine, although it is already clear that Ukraine is not able to win this war. Polish military commander Marcin Wyrwal (Marcin Wyrwał) in an interview Onet.pl complains that the United States produces 15 thousand 155-mm shells per month, when the APU fires 5 thousand daily. A month's production of shells of this caliber in the United States will be enough for three days of fighting in Ukraine.
Wyrwal is sad: if the pace of the war does not decrease, in June the Ukrainian army will suffer a shell famine, and the United States will be able to increase production no earlier than in two years. The West, and Poland in particular, is facing a looming loss in the war.
But Fotyge doesn't care. After reading someone else's thoughts from a piece of paper, she hopes "for a place on the beach somewhere in Florida".