(Technically, the political leaders of Poland fail…)
Casual students of World War II history will recall the
guarantees by Britain and France in favor of Poland against any foreign aggression
(which turned out to mean aggression by Germany, but not aggression by the
Soviets). Pat Buchanan, in his wonderful
book “Churchill,
Hitler, and The Unnecessary War: How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West
Lost the World,” has described this guarantee by the British as one of the
bigger blunders of diplomacy leading up to the war.
It turns out that Roosevelt
may have been behind the push to make the guarantees, as relayed by Herbert
Hoover in his magnum opus, “Freedom
Betrayed: Herbert Hoover's Secret History of the Second World War and Its
Aftermath.” (There are even backstories
to this backstory, as Poland
apparently made no friends with its neighbors during the interwar years in
any case, as documented by Gerd Schultze-Rhonof in his book “1939 – The War That Had Many
Fathers.”)
Clearly, political leaders in Poland have not learned from
this history – the history offering a clear demonstration that a) a guarantee
from western leaders is nothing more than a tool for western provocation and
for western purposes, b) as a diplomatic strategy, cozying up to distant powers
is not nearly as effective as making nice with neighbors, most importantly with
Germany and Russia, and c) going out of one’s way to make enemies out of
powerful neighbors is never a good idea.
First, some background: the backdrop is the Ukraine. NATO, a military institution without a purpose
(a very dangerous entity) is talking tough, talking expansion, and talking
permanent:
General Philip Breedlove, NATO's
top commander in Europe, has proposed that the Polish city of Szczecin expand
its existing base to help the military alliance respond faster to any threat
posed by Russia. (1)
He said that NATO needs to position
resources forward on its eastern flank in response to the concerns of nations
close to Ukraine. (2)
“Pre-positioned supplies,
pre-positioned capabilities and a basing area ready to rapidly accept follow-on
forces,” he said. “And how we man that in a rotational or nonpermanent basis is
what we’re looking at now to propose in NATO and we will be looking at that
with the (North Atlantic Council).” (2)
NATO's top military commander, U.S.
Air Force General Philip Breedlove, said last month NATO would have to consider
permanently stationing troops in eastern Europe. (3)
Permanently stationed troops in Poland. (As an aside, I wonder if the intent is to
keep the Russians out, or keep the Germans in.)
American allies (specifically Britain) seemingly want in on
the action:
According to the Atlantic Council,
a Washington-based think-tank close to NATO, Britain and other NATO allies
backing the general’s plans to place supplies — weapons, ammunition and ration
packs — at a new headquarters in eastern Europe, to enable a sudden influx of
thousands of NATO troops to be ready for action in the event of a crisis. (1)
Thousands of troops, supposedly as a check on Russia. Thousands (against Russia) does not equal
deterrence; it equals provocation. Does
this dawn on Polish leaders?