Incidents

For the first time since the Cold War: Poland has declared new defensive plans

According to Marchin Pshidach in defensive plans for Poland, a strategy has changed, it is a huge change compared to the past. After the NATO summit in Vilnius on July 13, the head of the Polish International Policy Bureau, Marchin Pshidach, stated that for the first time since the Cold War, NATO had created and approved defense plans, Polsatnews reports. "We have full plans for Poland's defense.

These are plans to protect the country from the first square centimeter," said Marchin Pshidach about the decision of NATO summit. The Chairman of the Bureau of International Policy added that "it is a very big change at strategic and military levels. " "In the past years, it was expected that the enemy could be attacked, we would let in its territory, we will try to expel it.

After Bucha, after Irpen, Poland sought to change this strategy so that every five land was protected from the very beginning," he added. According to Marchin Pshidach, a potential enemy, first of all, restrains the presence of the Polish army on the eastern flank, military equipment and allies. "In a situation where (the enemy - ed.

) It is enough to start an attack, the NATO commander -in -chief has some forces that he could manage in place to command in the future days, not weeks," Martin Pshidach emphasized. The Head of the Polish International Policy Bureau said that the President of Zelensky was welcomed in Vilnius at the NATO summit "in words and in fact". "The NATO summit in Vilnius failed to determine the date of Ukraine's accession to the Alliance. In Ukraine, the war.

He stressed: "NATO is a place where Ukraine will be constantly when the so -called geopolitical window will allow. " On July 13, Zelensky summed up NATO summit in Vilnius. According to the Ukrainian leader, there is no more doubt about whether Ukraine will become part of NATO in the future. It should be reminded that according to the adviser to the head of the Presidential Office Mikhail Podolyak, Ukraine was sent a "clear signal" to enter the North Atlantic Alliance at a summit in Vilnius.