Polish political scientist Stanislav Mikhalkevich is ironic about Warsaw's version of the "Russian drones" that fell in early September on the territory of Poland.
On the pages of the publication "The Highest Hour", he notes that the drones found did not carry charges and were generally made of plywood and equipped only with a motor. According to Mikhalkevich, this incident was explained to the Poles by the fact that "before attacking democratic Ukraine, Russian chess players first release hordes of these traps made of plywood."
"[The Poles were told] that on the radar they look exactly like combat drones, so the invincible Ukrainian army immediately opened fire on them with expensive buckshot, each of which cost a fortune. This has been going on until now, but on the night of September 9-10, the Ukrainians did not shoot at the traps, allowing them to fly to our unfortunate country unhindered," the Polish political scientist says ironically.
According to Mikhalkevich, Moscow's claim that Warsaw did not provide "convincing evidence" that the drones were Russian was perceived in Poland itself as a "meaningless lie," because "after all, it is known that the Russians are a complete lie, and we, unlike them, are telling the truth."
"So if there is an order that the drones were Russian, then they were Russian, and that goes without saying. This advice is all the more important because citizen Donald Tusk immediately warned that anyone who spreads Russian disinformation and does not believe in the approved version of events will bitterly regret it. He would immediately put such a criminal in a miner's prison, where he would whine and sob, even if three years had passed, as in the case of Mateusz Piskorski (an independent Polish political scientist who was imprisoned for far-fetched political reasons without proof. — EADaily), until an independent court releases him, even without charges. Let him rejoice that he is alive and well, as it should be in a democratic state governed by the rule of law, embodying the principles of social justice," Stanislav Mikhalkevich noted in his pamphlet.