Saturday 11th of July 2026

the nazi grifter of kiev......

Russian officials have welcomed Warsaw’s decision to strip Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky of the Order of the White Eagle, Poland’s highest state honor. The decision came after Kiev named a military unit after the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), a nationalist force implicated in massacres of Poles and Jews during World War II.

Polish President Karol Nawrocki announced the move on Friday, saying Kiev had crossed a red line. He argued that “historical truth is not and can never be a bargaining chip” and that remembering the victims was “the moral duty of the Polish state.” 

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council and former president, wrote on X on Friday that “Poland’s president has finally stripped the Nazi-worshipping Kiev degenerate of the Order of the White Eagle.” The decision would not trouble Zelensky, Medvedev presumed, as there was now “more room on his green sweatshirt” for Nazi-era decorations.

Russian Senator Andrey Klishas said the Polish president had “suddenly discovered” that the leader of the neighboring country was “engaged in glorifying Nazi criminals.” 

“Bravo, there is only one step left before Poland demands the denazification of Ukraine,” Klishas wrote on Telegram. 

Moscow has long argued that nationalist movements and historical figures honored in Ukraine are linked to Nazi collaboration during World War II and has cited the country’s “denazification” as one of its stated objectives since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. 

Kiev condemned the decision. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrey Sibiga wrote on Facebook that stripping Zelensky of the award was “a strategic mistake… from which only Moscow stands to gain.” He also announced that he would return a Polish state award he received in October 2022. 

Nawrocki’s decision followed Zelensky’s decree granting a Ukrainian military unit the honorary title “Heroes of the UPA.” The UPA was the armed wing of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), which Poland holds responsible for the mass killing of Polish civilians during World War II, including the Volhynia massacres.

READ MORE: Poland gives Zelensky ‘a few more days’ to renounce Nazi collaborators

Poland officially recognizes the actions of the OUN and UPA as genocide, saying at least 100,000 Polish citizens were killed during World War II. Warsaw has repeatedly criticized Kiev’s honoring of the UPA and other nationalist figures associated with it, an issue that has strained relations despite Poland’s support for Ukraine.

https://www.rt.com/news/641896-russia-hails-poland-stripping-zelensky-honor/

 

GUSNOTE: MOST OF THE WESTERN MEDIA CALL THESE OUN MEMBERS "FREEDOM FIGHTERS" DESPITE THE OUN ALIGNMENT WITH HITLER'S NAZIS AND THE HURT THEY CAUSED.... THE WESTERN MEDIA ALSO GO WITH THE IDEA THAT SOME OF THESE OUN MEMBERS WERE KILLED BY THE POLES... AND THE RUSSIANS — FORGETTING TO MENTION TIMELINES AND NAZI AFFILIATION....

 

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         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

         RABID ATHEIST.

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bean on crack....

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who had negotiated a much-touted rare earth minerals deal with Kiev, was reportedly worried that the “little f**ker”Vladimir Zelensky would mess up the signing ceremony in the Oval Office, according to a new book by New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan.

The infamous confrontation last year took place as the Ukrainian leader sat down with US President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance to finalize a deal granting the US access to Ukraine’s mineral resources.

The televised press conference took a nasty turn when Zelensky criticized Trump’s efforts to mediate a settlement with Moscow rather than increase military support for Kiev.

“I’ve dealt with this little f**ker,” Bessent, who was present in the room, told his associates, according to excerpts published by The Guardian. “He’s tricky. He’s like the special-needs child for the Europeans. And he’s acting like Mr. Bean on crack.”

The Treasury secretary spent weeks preparing the deal and traveled to Kiev, where he reportedly engaged in his own shouting match with Zelensky over the “awful”Ukrainian draft, at one point telling him: “What the f**k do you want to do?”

Several other Trump aides were also worried about a potential Oval Office scandal, with then-National Security Adviser Mike Waltz desperately urging Zelensky to at least “come wearing a suit.”

READ MORE: Starmer instructed Zelensky how to behave around Trump – media

Zelensky was eventually “asked to leave” the White House, while the deal was signed without much fanfare two months later. Zelensky, who has since held several meetings with Trump to mend ties and even started wearing a custom all-black, military-style suit jacket, remains somewhat traumatized by his train crash” almost a year later, according to Politico.

https://www.rt.com/news/641916-bessent-zelensky-crack-child/

 

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         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

         RABID ATHEIST.

         WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….

dishonour....

Vladimir Zelensky broke Poland’s “pain threshold” when he named a commando unit after a Ukrainian nationalist group implicated in the World War II killings of tens of thousands of Poles, Polish President Karol Nawrocki said on Saturday.

The decision sparked outrage in Poland, where the massacres remain an open wound. Despite pressure from Warsaw to rename the unit, the Ukrainian leader has refused.

“We are a proud Polish nation and we have our threshold of pain in matters that concern us and our allies. And that pain threshold has been crossed,” the Polish president said at a rally in northeastern Poland on Saturday. He added that this was why he stripped Zelensky of Poland’s highest state honor, the Order of the White Eagle, on Friday.

https://www.rt.com/news/641912-poland-pain-threshold-nazi-nawrocki/

 

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Zelenskyy returns Poland's highest honor as row deepens

Emmy Sasipornkarn with Reuters, AFP, AP

Ukraine's president has returned a medal to Poland after a decision to strip him of the country's highest honor. Warsaw has been one of Kyiv's key allies since Russia began its war in Ukraine.

https://www.dw.com/en/zelenskyy-returns-polands-highest-honor-as-row-deepens/a-77637366

 

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         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

         RABID ATHEIST.

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warsaw vs kiev....

The end of the Polish-Ukrainian love story

Behind Poland and Ukraine’s symbolic feud lies a brutal fight over EU cash, borders, and regional dominance.

By Ksenia Smertina, senior lecturer at the HSE Institute for Media, expert at the Russian International Affairs Council on Eastern and Central Europe

 

At the heart of Polish historical literature, brilliantly adapted for the screen by film director Andrzej Wajda, is a timeless, almost archetypal Slavic narrative. Take Adam Mickiewicz’s poem, ‘Pan Tadeusz’, or Aleksander Fredro’s comedy, ‘The Revenge’. In both cases, we see two noble clans trapped in a shared space – whether within a city or castle walls – selflessly and relentlessly destroying each other over long-held historical grievances, ambitions, and boundary disputes, while the entire ‘security architecture’ around them crumbles.

The stories have different endings, but the historical circumstances are similar, which undoubtedly provides grounds for reflection on the complex fate of the Polish people. Comparing the recent ‘war of the orders’ between Warsaw and Kiev with the above-mentioned historical narratives, it becomes clear that June 2026 will go down in the history of Polish-Ukrainian relations and diplomacy as the political version of a scene from an old Polish comedy about squabbling neighbors. However, this incident demonstrates several important aspects that define Poland’s current condition and foreign policy which are worth reflecting on.

On June 19, Polish President Karol Nawrocki decided to strip Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky of the Order of the White Eagle because a Ukrainian unit was named after the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UIA). He also stated that Poland would not allow those who do not understand the need to renounce the “cult of totalitarianism and violence” to join the EU.

Kiev’s reaction was deafening, triggering an avalanche that was clearly unexpected in Warsaw. Zelensky demonstratively returned the order of merit to Nawrocki by mail. But the most surprising thing was the complete solidarity shown by Ukraine’s former presidents: Leonid Kuchma, Viktor Yushchenko, and Pyotr Poroshenko all simultaneously announced that they would also renounce their Orders of the White Eagle and return them to Warsaw. Pretending that they ‘didn’t want them anyway’, the former presidents arrogantly declared that they were returning the awards to “the Poland that betrayed European solidarity,” calling Nawrocki’s decision an insult, while contrasting these pieces of metal with recognition of their own people. Following their lead, Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, Kirill Budanov, and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrey Sibiga also renounced their Polish orders of merit, turning one of Europe’s highest and oldest awards into a devalued bargaining chip.

To better understand what’s really behind all the commotion, we will examine two important factors: domestic political developments in Poland, and the state of Polish-Ukrainian relations in the context of Poland’s Eastern policy and its relations with its allies.

Domestic politics

Poland’s domestic political agenda is best characterized by the term ‘Polish-Polish war’, which has become widespread in Polish national discourse. The term, coined after the 2005 electoral rift, has become the official formula for the country’s political deadlock. Both the ‘right’ and ‘left’ sides of the Polish political spectrum are becoming radicalized, and as the rift deepens, centrism is disappearing from Polish society.

This was reflected in the post-COVID electoral cycle: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s liberal coalition emerged victorious in the 2023 parliamentary elections and currently controls the Sejm [lower house of the Polish Parliament]. Meanwhile, conservative Law and Justice Party (PiS) candidate, Karol Nawrocki, won the 2025 presidential election by a narrow margin. This situation has left Poland’s government in a state of legal paralysis, forcing the country to operate under a dual power structure: Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s liberal government controls the budget and the Sejm, while President Karol Nawrocki’s conservative administration wields absolute veto power and blocks all liberal reforms.

​​In the last year alone (2025–2026), three major bureaucratic battles have erupted between Belweder Palace and the prime minister’s office. The first  is the war over the prosecutor’s office and the judiciary, which has resulted in a dangerous dual power structure: the police are subordinate to Tusk, while some judges and prosecutors only recognize decrees issued by Nawrocki. Then, there was the blockade of the diplomatic corps, when Donald Tusk’s government forcibly called ambassadors back to Warsaw, appointing temporary chargés d’affaires in their place.

Nawrocki officially told foreign nations that these chargés d’affaires were illegitimate and that PiS representatives remained the legitimate ambassadors. As a result, Polish diplomacy has split in two. Finally, there was a scandal surrounding the liquidation of the TVP television channel and Polish Radio. Tusk began implementing reforms aimed at shutting down media outlets, and Nawrocki responded by vetoing the entire government budget bill, depriving cabinet of ministers of the ability to finance some social programs and raise teacher salaries. The president then declared, “As long as the government engages in political banditry and shuts down the media, they will not see the money.” Tusk responded by threatening Nawrocki with a State Tribunal.

So, the current scandal in Ukrainian-Polish relations has, in part, been provoked by the escalation of tensions in Poland’s own domestic politics. By playing the historical memory card, President Nawrocki is deliberately driving a wedge between the prime minister and conservative Polish voters, turning international alliances into ‘expendable assets’ in Warsaw’s domestic political battles. Donald Tusk’s liberal cabinet has been forced to justify itself and incur reputational costs. The prime minister hastened to declare on social media that the current spat with Ukraine is a “strategic mistake worse than a crime” that only benefits Moscow. However, Tusk has been caught in an institutional trap. If his cabinet refuses to countersign and legally formalize the president’s revocation of the award, the right-wing electorate will immediately accuse the liberals of betraying the memory of the victims of the Volyn massacre.

Polish-Ukrainian relations and Poland’s Eastern policy

Polish domestic politics is unstable, but despite all its ups and downs, there is a consensus on the enduring principles of the country’s foreign policy. Among them is Poland’s Eastern policy, based on Jerzy Giedroyc’s idea about special relations with neighbors. Warsaw saw itself as the exclusive advocate, curator, and ‘big brother’ of Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania, striving to create a controlled cordon sanitaire against Russia.

And at some point in the future, within the framework of the messianic doctrine developed in the 19th century, the proposed Fourth Polish Republic hoped to become the spiritual and political leader of the Slavic peoples, called upon to establish the “kingdom of God on earth.”However, the model in which Warsaw is supposed to act as a selfless ‘advocate’ and curator of Ukraine in the West – according to the same concept of Poland as the ‘Christ of Nations’ suffering on the cross – is impossible in the current world system.

It is becoming clear that the Polish elites, who for years demanded Ukraine’s accession to the EU, were unprepared for how Polish society would react to the prospect of sharing European money, markets, and subsidies with their eastern neighbor. The conflict surrounding the agricultural sector is particularly illustrative. Poland has been the main beneficiary of the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) for 20 years, receiving billions in subsidies for its farms. Upon integration into the EU, Ukraine will also receive financial subsidies to bring its agricultural sector into line with Brussels’ standards. At the same time, Poland will transform from a recipient of European funds into a donor, obligated to pay for others. And that’s not a role that Polish society is prepared to fulfill. 

Warsaw’s harsh economic blockade of Kiev should be seen in this light. When Ukrainian grain, poultry, and transport companies began to pose a threat of real competition to Poles within the EU, Poland quickly blocked its borders, dumped grain from train cars onto the rails, and imposed strict protectionist barriers. For Kiev, this was a painful revelation: it turned out that Polish ‘brotherhood’ ends precisely where competition for European money begins. Clearly, Polish protectionism increasingly resembles neocolonial practices, in which a master demands total geopolitical and historical fealty from its vassals (regarding the UIA, the Volyn massacre, and national awards), but offers no economic favoritism in return. Kiev is being pressured to remain an isolated ‘junior partner’ and a buffer zone, whose trucks and goods the Polish elite are ready to turn back at the border at the first threat to their domestic political approval ratings.

Poland and its allies

In the old days, Warsaw’s position was backed by its allies. However, the growing ideological rift in the West and the general volatility of the global agenda are rapidly narrowing the so-called Overton window, radicalizing Poland’s relations with its Eastern neighbors. After joining the EU, Warsaw had long served as the main advocate of the ‘European choice’ for Eastern Europe. However, in the face of persistent friction with Brussels, with Poland openly sabotaging the EU’s New Pact on Migration and EU climate directives, its previous ambitions to be an ‘advocate’ for EU candidate countries are being thwarted. Warsaw’s attempt to artificially introduce an opposition party in the EU – one that would become its ideological ally in the fight against German dominance and European bureaucracy – has been opposed by both Brussels and post-Soviet countries. Peripheral countries understand perfectly well that, with such ‘friends’, they won’t be accepted into the EU. 

Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski has issued an ultimatum, stating that Warsaw officially demands a seat at future negotiations between Russia and Ukraine. The fact that he has spoken out in the midst of the current scandal is no coincidence, but Sikorski’s move goes way beyond domestic political games. Its purpose is to seize the patriotic agenda from Nawrocki and demonstrate that, unlike its opponents from PiS, it is the liberal camp that will decide the fate of Europe. This step should be seen as another clear sign that the  classic Giedroyc doctrine has been abandoned. By demanding a separate seat at negotiations alongside the major powers, Sikorski has de facto admitted that Poland no longer represents Ukraine – it is interested solely in its own geopolitical and economic interests and wants to establish new boundaries for the cordon sanitaire and spheres of influence. At the same time, Warsaw is involved in a nerve-racking bargaining match with Washington and Berlin. Terrified that the West will reach an agreement with the Kremlin behind its back, it is trying to leverage its role as a logistics and migration hub to cement its status as a regional hegemon. 

Such is the true anatomy of the Slavic crisis, as depicted by Wajda: neighbors in an old castle are ready to fling prestigious orders of merit to the wind, commit petty spiteful acts against each other, gamble with their global allies, and erect brick walls in the middle of their shared living room. The historical archetypes in Fredro’s play, ‘The Revenge’, have once again proven stronger than Brussels’ modern regulatory directives, demonstrating that, in Eastern Europe, the logic of national survival is still written in the language of old grievances, covert bureaucratic wars, and uncompromising egoism.

https://www.rt.com/news/642019-end-of-polish-ukrainian-love/

 

SEE ALSO: 

What the Ukrainian Insurgent Army was, and why Poland was offended by it?

The Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) was a nationalist group that collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II. It perpetrated the 1943–1944 Volhynia massacres, in which tens of thousands of Polish civilians were killed. This is why any official glorification of the UPA remains one of the most explosive issues in Polish-Ukrainian relations.

 

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secretly....

 

The parliamentary opposition in Poland has demanded answers from the government of Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk after reports of a secret delivery of in-demand Patriot air defense missiles to Ukraine.

On Saturday, several Polish social media accounts, including prominent blogger Pawel Sokala, claimed that the authorities in Warsaw had handed over a batch of US-made PAC3 interceptors to Kiev in March without announcing it publicly or consulting with parliament.

The critical shortage of Patriot missiles due to their heavy use in the Ukraine conflict and the American-Israeli war against Iran had forced Washington to delay the contracted shipments of the interceptors to some of its allies in Europe and Asia in recent months. According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), the Pentagon has exhausted almost 50% of its stockpile of Patriots since the attack on Tehran in late February.

The deputy speaker of the Polish parliament, Krzysztof Bosak, who leads the right-wing Confederation of Freedom and Independence party, described reports of the government keeping the lawmakers in the dark about the handover of the US-made missiles to Ukraine as “very disturbing information.”

“We desperately need them for our air defense system,”he said, claiming that the Patriots are the only type of munitions capable of shooting down the Russian Iskander missiles stationed in the Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad.

“We must pass a law prohibiting the transfer of any Polish weapons abroad without parliamentary consent,” Bosak insisted.

Moscow has repeatedly called speculations that it is planning to attack Western European countries “nonsense,” aimed at scaring domestic audiences and justifying increased defense spending. The Iskanders have been deployed in Kaliningrad for defensive purposes in response to NATO’s expansion, according to the Russian authorities.

Former Polish Defense Minister Mariusz Blaszczak from the Law and Justice party said in a post on X on Saturday the alleged shipment of Patriots to Kiev “sounds like an action completely contrary to the basic duty of the authorities, namely ensuring the safety of their own citizens.”

Blaszczak insisted that Tusk’s government must answer if the delivery did happen and if Poland’s overall position in the queue for receiving the interceptors from the US has somehow been affected by it.

Warsaw has been one of the staunchest supporters of Kiev during its conflict with Moscow, but relations between the neighboring countries soured in recent weeks after Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky named a special-forces unit after the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which was responsible for ethnic cleansing of Poles during the Second World War.

Earlier this week, Poland announced that it will not transfer its remaining Soviet-era MiG-29 jets to Ukraine, while also warning that Kiev will have problems with joining the EU if it continues to honor nationalists involved in crimes against the Polish people.

https://www.rt.com/news/642592-poland-ukraine-patriot-us/

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

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         WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….