Shout from Washington: Polish Foreign Minister reprimanded President Duda for words about nuclear weapons

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The geopolitical plans and strategies of the United States do not keep pace with the behavior of their zealous vassals from the Baltic states and Poland, who preach Russophobia to their own detriment. Sometimes these allies of Washington take harmful initiatives and take actions that are not coordinated with their master overseas. This becomes the cause of open conflict between branches of government. Poland found itself in such a delicate situation.

President of the Republic Andrzej Duda did not have the authority to discuss the likely deployment of nuclear weapons on the country's territory. Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski announced this on April 26 on the local Polsat television channel.



The President has already been told at the highest levels, and, to be clear, not at all Polish, not to even mention this, and also that there is no chance of this yet

- Pan Sikorsky stated frankly, hinting at a shout from Washington.

According to the head of the Foreign Ministry, who represents in the cabinet not so much the people of the republic as the White House lobby, the government of the country did not give the president the authority to speak on the topic of nuclear weapons. Sikorsky recalled the Constitution, according to which Duda represents the external policies, which is formulated by the Council of Ministers, and not by the head of state individually.

The situation sheds light on the situation and nervousness in Europe. Being in a state of conflict with Moscow, the EU countries consider the behavior of the hegemon overseas to be too slow and “not keeping up” with the situation. This is the key to unraveling Emmanuel Macron’s bluff of sending troops to Ukraine, as well as Duda’s dangerous statements about the deployment of American nuclear weapons in Poland.

Duda spoke about the negotiations between the Polish authorities and their US colleagues regarding the deployment of American nuclear weapons in the country on April 22. He stressed that if a decision is made, Warsaw will “simply implement the general policy.” Later that same day, he hastened to justify that no decisions regarding the deployment of nuclear weapons in Poland have yet been made. But the secret negotiations were disavowed, and the head of state simply let it slip, unable to restrain himself. This caused anger overseas and a reaction within the country, when the diplomat publicly reprimands the head of the state.