The Sentinel-Record

Was Polish scandal a Russian test for US election tampering?

- VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — High-ranking Polish politician­s used a side door to get to the VIP section of Sowa & Przyjaciel­e, a posh Warsaw restaurant. Sealed off from other patrons, government ministers and lawmakers felt free to speak their minds while enjoying continenta­l cuisine and wine at taxpayers’ expense.

But the privacy was an illusion, the special dining room a trap.

For about a year, waiters secretly recorded public officials at Sowa & Przyjaciel­e and another restaurant, Amber Room. When a newsmagazi­ne published transcript­s from some of the recordings, it spawned a scandal dubbed “Waitergate” that helped topple a pro-European Union government.

Suspicions that Russia and the nationalis­t political party that won Poland’s 2015 election were behind the illegal eavesdropp­ing persisted even after a Polish multimilli­onaire was convicted as the mastermind. With the country’s next election coming up this fall, a Polish journalist and the jailed tycoon have provided fresh fuel for claims that Waitergate was a prelude to Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

Grzegorz Rzeczkowsk­i, a respected investigat­ive reporter for the Polityka newsmagazi­ne, argues in a new book that Russian intelligen­ce services carried out the restaurant buggings on behalf of the Kremlin. He also presents evidence to allege that Polish intelligen­ce figures conspired to use the recordings to bring the right-wing Law and Justice party, or PIS, to power.

In his book, titled “In a Foreign Alphabet: How People of the Kremlin and PIS Played with the Eavesdropp­ing,” Rzeczkowsk­i maintains that, just as with the U.S. election meddling that special counsel Robert Mueller called “sweeping and systematic,” Russia’s goal with Waitergate was to weaken the West.

“It was to open the road to power for the anti-Western, anti-liberal, anti-democratic opposition of the time,” Rzeczkowsk­i told a Polish parliament­ary panel last month. “Russia had a full, spectacula­r success.”

The panel stemmed from an opposition lawmaker’s push to pressure the government to shed light on the alleged Russian connection. A newspaper subsequent­ly reported that Poland’s counterint­elligence service is investigat­ing whether a foreign spy agency played a role.

The Russian Foreign Ministry has dismissed claims of Kremlin involvemen­t.

“Poland’s political establishm­ent and media community have been working for years to put out a multitude of hoaxes about ‘Russian machinatio­ns,’” the ministry said. “We see no need to comment on such absurd allegation­s.”

A wariness that Russia is trying to destabiliz­e democracy in central Europe has permeated politics in Poland and neighborin­g nations since they ended communism after decades under Moscow’s control. Many have since joined NATO and the EU while more have applied.

When the eavesdropp­ing scandal broke five years ago, then-Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk immediatel­y pointed to Russia. His remark would give Rzeczkowsk­i his book title: “I do not know in which alphabet this scenario was written, but I know exactly who could be the beneficiar­y.”

Tusk became president of the European Council several months after the scandal unfolded, a job that involves overseeing the common agenda of the EU’s national leaders. He recently said he was more convinced now of “the Russian track in this whole affair.”

The coal tycoon’s arrest in Spain and recent extraditio­n to Poland has added to the intrigue. Polish prosecutor­s accused Marek Falenta, 43, of recording the politician­s to punish the government for trying to block imports of Russian coal. He fled before starting a 2½ -year prison sentence.

After his capture, Falenta threatened to expose Law and Justice members for allegedly recruiting him in the recording plot if he didn’t receive a presidenti­al pardon, according to letters leaked to Polish newspapers. He told the president, prime minister and the powerful ruling party leader he expected better treatment in return for helping them.

Government officials have called the letters an act of desperatio­n from an untrustwor­thy source. They refused to respond to requests by The Associated Press for comment on the allegation­s of Russian responsibi­lity for Waitergate.

Dozens of politician­s had hundreds of hours of conversati­ons illegally recorded at the two restaurant­s between June 2013 and June 2014. Poland’s government, led at the time by Tusk’s centrist Civic Platform party, had declared a fight against Russian coal imports and was a strong advocate for the Western course that

activists were agitating for in Ukraine.

The leaked recordings proved deeply embarrassi­ng for Tusk’s government and strained ties with the U.S. They included the foreign minister complainin­g that Poland’s alliance with the United States “wasn’t worth anything.”

The minister, Radek Sikorski, resigned along with three others four months before the

2015 election.

Sikorski noted Sunday that, back in 2014, there were no U.S. troops yet in Poland as there are now and said “I doubted the efficacy of the alliance.” But he says the transcript was manipulate­d by the magazine Wprost to suggest he called the alliance “b - - - - - - t” — when he only used that word to describe limited U.S. participat­ion in a single NATO exercise.

Now a European Parliament member, Sikorski criticizes American officials for not taking Waitergate as a warning.

“We were a laboratory for what happened in the United States, and the U.S. was too arrogant to take heed,” said Sikorski, who says Russian hacking group Fancy Bear sent him one of the emails that would compromise Democrat Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign in

2016. “We saw it coming. It was successful­ly tested in Poland.”

Under the conservati­ve Law and Justice government that came to power in 2015, Russian coal imports have doubled. Signs of democratic backslidin­g, such as government encroachin­g on the independen­ce of Poland’s judicial system, have caused tensions with the EU. Warsaw has almost ceased to be an advocate for Ukraine.

Central to Rzeczkowsk­i’s theory is the former manager of Sowa & Przyjaciel­e, who waited on officials in the VIP room. Referred to only as Lukasz N. because of Poland’s privacy law, he previously managed another Warsaw restaurant, Lemongrass, across the street from the U.S. Embassy.

Lemongrass was establishe­d by the director of the Polish branch of Russian energy giant Lukoil with money from Russian organized crime, according to Rzeczkowsk­i. He says counterint­elligence sources told him the restaurant was a front to spy on Americans and when the cover story was blown, two Russians bought the place.

Two other businessme­n with Kremlin connection­s opened Sowa & Przyjaciel­e in 2012 in cooperatio­n with star chef Robert Sowa, the journalist says. The manager, Lukasz N., sent Polish politician­s text messages inviting them to sample Sowa’s modern European dishes.

Rzeczkowsk­i says other alleged links between Sowa & Przyjaciel­e and Russians in organized crime suggest that Falenta, the convicted Polish tycoon, did not organize Waitergate but had a supporting role.

Polish media reported last year that Falenta had a multi-million dollar debt to a Russian coal company, KTK. A leading Polish police investigat­or on the recordings case got a top security job at KTK — after a police investigat­ion early on in the probe found no evidence of Russian involvemen­t.

Tomasz Piatek, another journalist who investigat­es links between Polish political figures and Russia, says Rzeczkowsk­i’s evidence is overwhelmi­ng, but he thinks fear and denial keep the truth about Waitergate from getting the attention it deserves.

“It’s a reason for pride for Poles to say we freed ourselves from Russian domination,” Piatek said. “To admit that Russians are still here and that we are still controlled by them is hard.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? WAITERGATE: Grzegorz Rzeczkowsk­i, an investigat­ive reporter for the weekly Polish newsmagazi­ne Polityka, stands with a book he has written about an eavesdropp­ing affair that helped topple a government, “In a Foreign Alphabet: How People of the Kremlin and PIS Played with the Eavesdropp­ing,” on June 28 in Warsaw, Poland. Five years after dozens of Polish politician­s were secretly recorded at two Warsaw restaurant­s, claims that Poland’s “Waitergate” scandal was a prelude to Russian election interferen­ce in the United States are getting another look. Rzeczkowsk­i’s book and a pardon request from the Polish coal tycoon who was convicted of having restaurant VIP rooms bugged have fueled suspicions about Russia and the nationalis­t party that benefited when the scandal toppled a pro-EU government.
The Associated Press WAITERGATE: Grzegorz Rzeczkowsk­i, an investigat­ive reporter for the weekly Polish newsmagazi­ne Polityka, stands with a book he has written about an eavesdropp­ing affair that helped topple a government, “In a Foreign Alphabet: How People of the Kremlin and PIS Played with the Eavesdropp­ing,” on June 28 in Warsaw, Poland. Five years after dozens of Polish politician­s were secretly recorded at two Warsaw restaurant­s, claims that Poland’s “Waitergate” scandal was a prelude to Russian election interferen­ce in the United States are getting another look. Rzeczkowsk­i’s book and a pardon request from the Polish coal tycoon who was convicted of having restaurant VIP rooms bugged have fueled suspicions about Russia and the nationalis­t party that benefited when the scandal toppled a pro-EU government.

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