The Europe after Visegrad
The inevitable split of the Visegrad Group does not discredit Central Europe.
The inevitable split of the Visegrad Group does not discredit Central Europe.
There is no room for symbols marked with the red star in public space in free, independent and democratic Poland, nor in free Europe.
Russia can only be changed—or saved from itself—by eliminating its capacity for re-imperialisation.
Only Vladimir Putin could have approved these barbaric murders as part of a plan to inflict maximum pain, suffering and demoralization on the Ukrainia...
Will we recognise Russia as a normal state after the war, as we did Germany at the Munich Conference, or will we draw a line beyond which crimes are n...
The answer to the question, is Russia a terrorist state, depends on what one means by “terrorism,” and how that accusation can be proven.
Can we make Russia accountable for the crime of aggression? - ask prof.
Once the war ends, we will face the challenge of helping to rebuild Ukraine. This is necessary for the development of our entire region.
A distance of 400 km and 82 years separates Bucha from Katyn. Only a little more divides Mariupol from Warsaw.
There are two futures of Europe.
The providers of huge funds feeding Putin’s war machine still lecture Poland on the rule of law and pretend to see no difference between the defence a...
The fate of our continent is being decided on the plains of Ukraine.
The ancient Romans used to say si vis pacem, para bellum, in other words “If you want peace, prepare for war”.
For the last quarter century, the Polish economy has been an underappreciated success story – underappreciated certainly in my country, the United Sta...
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodów) was a state that existed in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries and was inhabited by ...
On the 3rd of May each year the Poles celebrate the anniversary of the passing of their 1791 constitution, the first such document of its kind in Euro...
The world must seek out-of-the-box solutions. Only in this way will we be able to head off the dangers of a domino effect.
The idea of Polish solidarity gives hope for a different organisation of our part of the world – one that is contrary to the “Russkiy mir”.
The Pope is trying to do his best to stop the war with a realistic peace, which would consider justice and resolve - says Andrea TORNIELLI...
Prague has shown it can engage in serious gestures of support of Ukraine; now, it will need to prove it can do high politics.
Relations between our nations are complicated.
The war in Ukraine looks like a fight between an autocracy and democracies but it is not an ideological war.
Many of the factors identified by social scientists as driving anti-immigration attitudes – unfamiliarity, security concerns, “non-deservingness” – si...
Putin came for Georgia, came for the Crimea, has come for Ukraine.
Over the last two weeks two million people have left their homes in Ukraine and crossed the border into Poland.
WW2 left the Poles scattered across many continents.
Over three million Ukrainians have fled their country following the Russian invasion.
If Europe thinks it will remain the same if Ukraine is lost, then it is deeply mistaken - Mateusz MORAWIECKI declared in Kyiv.
Since Russian attack on Ukraine, already 672,000 people fleeing the war entered Poland from Ukraine (as of March 4, at 07.00).
The lack of a proper assessment of communism and appreciation of the past's importance led to the warning signs being ignored.
Putin was stopped stopped by the heroic attitude of the Ukrainians and the public opinion which acted against the governments of some western states.
After 1945, the world paid tribute to the soldiers who had contributed to the victory over Nazi Germany. Not so in Poland.
The relations between Turkey and Poland, two countries that do not share a border today, have a depth far beyond expectations.
The war that Putin has unleashed on Ukraine is also a battle for the soul of the West.
Neither the Christian philosopher Bach, nor the radiant genius Mozart, nor the eccentric mystic and fantasist Schumann, nor the arch-virtuoso Liszt he...
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