• Otter@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I think it’s still consistent with all that, people are misunderstanding the headline;

    Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki on Wednesday said his country would no longer arm Ukraine and will instead focus on its own defense.

    Which makes sense, you can’t give everything away. Also Ukraine may not need more weapons, and it might benefit more from other forms of support. Having a well defended allied neighbor has benefits too.

    It’s still ‘bad’, and could be a political move in response to the grain stuff, but it’s not ‘changing sides’

    • jet@hackertalks.com
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      1 year ago

      Perun has done an excellent job of demonstrating how dedicated Poland is, if not to the support of Ukraine, to the cause of inflicting maximum pain on Russia.

      In terms of total budget, in terms of armament sent over unofficially, in terms of everything except getting involved in the firing themselves.

      One might say there is a cultural component to Poland’s very strong reaction to the situation. Which makes no more arms almost a non sequitur.

      Even if Poland has given away everything it can give, the more they produce and buy, the more they can give. Until they’re in a shooting war themselves

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The problem is that one thing is the Polish People, another thing is the politicians in power in Poland.

        The politicians will go along with the people if that’s to their advantage (and all the rearming with fresh weaponry and giving the old ones to Ukraine is a wonderful setup for said politicians to personally make tons of money with all that public dosh flowing around), but that doesn’t mean they’re true believers.

        (This, by the way is true everywhere, especially with populist politicians, and I’m not trying to single out Poland on this here).

        As it so happens, right now the governing party in Poland is near parliamentary elections, running behind on the polls, and the Farmer Vote seems like a mighty appealing way to solve that. Since the farmers are worried about “cheap ukranian grain”, the politicians of the governing party, following their own personal priorities, are sacrificing the “hurting of Russia” and Ukraine to get those votes.

        I mean, it makes sense for them, but it also shows their “Hurt Russia” policy isn’t really heartfelt, more a “principle” of convenience (and when it’s not convenient, they have other principles).