Unlike one of your idiot Jews here, who claimed the U.S can not survive without Israeli Research, and Development.
Which is propaganda, I will not say that the U.S, or Israel needs Poland.
However, Poland has been a loyal ally of the U.S, unlike your rotten Israel.
Your Israel is more of a headache than a benefit.
Poland?! Ha ha ha. They've been enemies of the US and the allies for the last two world wars.
No, it's your Israel who has been an enemy of the U.S.
Poland on the other hand fought on the same side as the U.S in WW1, and WW2.
Poland unlike Israel helped in Iraq with the U.S.
Polish scum supported the USSR wholeheartedly throughout the entirety of the Cold War. Nothing to be proud of.
Oh yeah?
Poles wholeheartedly supported the Soviet regime?
Then why Polish Solidarity which was the anti-Soviet movement which helped break up the Soviet Union?
If Poles were so vigorously pro-Soviet, why do most Poles hate Soviets?
The facts are that Poles were victims of a Soviet regime founded by Stalin, Churchill, FDR, Truman, and the Jewish trio of Jakub Berman, Hillary Minc, and Roman Zambrowski.
Yawn, for over 50 years the communist headquarters was run out of Warsaw Poland by the Polish commie scumbags and their leaders. Go open a book, Ya dumb Nazi.
Communism in Poland - Wikipedia
Communism in Poland can trace its origins to the late 19th century: the
Marxist First Proletariat party was founded in 1882.
Rosa Luxemburg (1871–1919) of the
SDKPiL party and the publicist
Stanisław Brzozowski (1878–1911) were important early
Polish Marxists.
During the
interwar period in the
Second Polish Republic,
communists formed the
Communist Party of Poland (KPP). Most of the KPP leaders and activists perished during
Joseph Stalin's
Great Purge in the 1930s and the Party was abolished by the
Comintern in 1938.
In 1942 the
Polish Workers' Party (PPR), a new Polish
communist party, was established in
Nazi-
occupied Poland and was soon led by
Władysław Gomułka. In
Moscow the
Union of Polish Patriots was set-up with Stalin's support as a rival communist center. As
Nazi Germany was being defeated, the Polish communists cooperated with the
Soviet Union, in opposition to the
Polish government-in-exile, in order to establish a
Soviet-dependent Polish state. This led to the creation of the
Polish People's Republic and, after the fusion of the PPR with the
Polish Socialist Party (PPS), the
Polish United Workers' Party (PZPR). In post-
World War II Poland, the Polish communists could count on limited popular support and their staying in power depended on the support of their Soviet allies.
There were also repeated attempts by some Polish academics and philosophers, including
Leszek Kołakowski,
Tadeusz Kotarbiński,
Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz and
Stanisław Ossowski to develop, as part of the
revisionist movement, a form of "Polish Marxism'". While their efforts to create a bridge between Poland's history and the Marxist ideology were mildly successful, especially in comparison to similar attempts in other countries of the
Eastern Bloc, they have been stifled by the regime's unwillingness to risk stepping too far in the reformist direction.