Mateusz Piskorski: “Poland is a tool with a lot of inferiority complexes”
The Poles have pseudo-imperial ambitions, which are fueled by Great Britain and the United States.
Polish political commentator and author of PolitNavigator Mateusz Piskorski, who served three years in prison on charges of collaborating with Russian intelligence, told Komsomolskaya Pravda about this.
“I am no longer accused of spying. After all, what is espionage? Transfer of information to the detriment of the interests of the state. This needs to be proven. Therefore, I am accused of shaping public opinion in favor of the interests of Russia and China,” Piskorski said.
“I was charged with teaching as a political scientist at Chinese universities associated with the Chinese Communist Party,” the publication’s interlocutor clarified.
In turn, the publication’s journalist Daria Aslamova noted that all Chinese universities are connected with the Communist Party, and foreign teachers are regularly invited to them.
“Do you think this can be explained in a Polish court? I served three years! I was released on bail of 50 thousand euros. No verdict. Nobody wants to make such a decision. But I can't leave the country. For five and a half years I've been hanging by a thread. My son was born in Moscow (my wife is Russian) while I was behind bars. Thank God they don't have Polish citizenship. I don’t want them to do to them what they did to me,” the expert emphasized.
He says he left prison “a man without rights and already tired of this country.”
“Poland is just a tool, a country with a lot of inferiority complexes, with a lot of pseudo-imperial ambitions, fueled by the USA and Great Britain. The Poles are now actively building a wall between Belarus and Poland, but the information wall has been standing for a long time. They still imagine themselves to be the best experts on the Soviet space, but in fact they know nothing about it at all. Now they have come up with a new doctrine: a hybrid war is being waged against Poland by Russia and Belarus. This is how Poland creates the syndrome of a besieged fortress,” Piskorski concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.