Oman Daily Observer

Moscow and Warsaw feud over who was to blame for WWII

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WARSAW: Poland and Russia have again clashed over who was to blame for unleashing World War II, each accusing the other of distorting history and trying to undermine already strained relations.

Tensions are running high between Warsaw and its Sovietera master, with Nato and EU member Poland fearing what it has described as Russian military adventuris­m and imperialis­t tendencies.

“We have greeted with concern and disbelief the statements by representa­tives of the Russian Federation, including President Vladimir Putin, on the genesis and the course of World War II, which misreprese­nt the events,” the Polish foreign ministry said.

Warsaw criticised Moscow for “renewing Stalinist propaganda” and “wasting” reconcilia­tion efforts and what it said were the achievemen­ts of former leaders Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin in trying to improve ties.

The ministry also spoke of the suffering of Poles and Poland and “hostile” Soviet actions both before and during the war, estimating the number of Polish victims of Soviet repression at 566,000.

In Moscow, a foreign ministry spokeswoma­n retorted that it was Poland that had “undermined” relations with its “aggressive rhetoric and demolishin­g of monuments to fighters of fascism”.

It also accused Poland of being the leading mover in the EU sanctions slapped on Russia over the Ukraine conflict, which were this month extended by Brussels for another six months.

PUTIN: ‘INCREDIBLE CYNICISM’ Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin blamed the Western powers and Poland for World War II, pointing to various treaties signed with Nazi Germany before the conflict began in 1939.

He also lashed out at the

European Parliament over a September resolution on “Europe’s historical memory” which he said virtually accused the Soviet Union of starting World War II and put it on a par with the Nazis.

“But to equate the Soviet Union (with) Nazi Germany... is incredible cynicism,” he said. “This means that people do not know history, they cannot read or write!”

Poland has often appealed to its EU and Nato partners to guard against “appeasing” Moscow.

It has cultivated close ties with the US, which it regards as the primary guarantor of its security within Nato and a bulwark against Russia’s military might.

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