Can a Large Army of 300.000 Polish Troops LIBERATE Kaliningrad as the Russian Amy Melts day by day?

Описание к видео Can a Large Army of 300.000 Polish Troops LIBERATE Kaliningrad as the Russian Amy Melts day by day?

Why is Poland preparing for war against Russia?

And with the outbreak of the war with Russia in Ukraine, is the Warsaw government feeling Putin's focus on it?
How is the threat from Belarus shaping the Polish military strategy?

What role does the United States play in Poland's defense?
In fact, such questions have been on Poland's agenda for many years.

The war in Ukraine has only brought all these risks into sharp focus.

It also triggered the mobilization of Poland, once the most powerful European country.
Looking at the history of the two countries, we can understand why Poland was preparing to defend against Russia and build the strongest army in Europe.
In the mid-1500s, a united Poland was the largest and perhaps the most powerful state in Europe.
But it disappeared during the Partition of Poland (1772-1918), parceled out to the Russian, Prussian and Austrian empires.

Located at a geographical crossroads in Central Europe, Poland has been shaken and weakened over the centuries by the forces of regional history.
Re-established as a nation in 1918 but devastated by two world wars, Poland suffered greatly throughout the 20th century.
With the collapse of the Third Reich, Poland effectively lost its independence again. It became a communist satellite state of the Soviet Union and experienced nearly half a century of totalitarian rule, unchallenged by Polish workers.
In May 1989, the Polish government fell, along with communist regimes across Eastern Europe, and a rapid transformation towards a democracy that will challenge authoritarianism in the 21st century began.
This transformation also triggered critical military investments and anti-Russian defense, with the annexation of Crimea in 2014.
Russian threats to Europe triggered Putin's dreams of a complete blockade of the Eastern Bloc.

Given its strategic position sandwiched between NATO and Russia, Belarus was seen as key to any discussion on the future of European security.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko was eager to be the main actor in Russian President Vladimr Putin's scenario of a possible invasion of Poland after Ukraine.

But Poland, seen as the US military base in Eastern Europe, is no pushover against the appetitive aggression of either Russia or Belarus.

Behind Poland's steadfast stand against Putin and Lukashenko are some surprising military, political and economic realities.

We will now delve into these deeper details and take a closer look at how Poland is preparing for a possible Russian invasion.

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