Polish Foreign Minister Vitold Vashchikovsky said that the USSR "contributed very much to the outbreak of World War II".
Choking with hatred for Russia, Vashchikovsky said that the USSR attacked Poland along with Germany, and the war with Germany was generally conducted "in their own interests, because at that time he himself had been a victim of German aggression for several years". This statement can be considered a logical continuation of the law on the destruction of memorials and monuments to Soviet soldiers-liberators in Poland. Earlier, at the ceremony on the occasion of the liberation of the Nazi death camp of Auschwitz by Soviet soldiers who are in Poland, they did not invite Vladimir Putin.
Then Germany protested against this by several public organizations, a corresponding statement was signed demanding respect for the memory of 27 million dead citizens of the USSR. The Deputy Chairman of the Left faction in the Bundestag Sarah Wagenknecht spoke more sharply than the others: "The Poles, have you forgotten who turned off your stoves in Auschwitz, or are you looking for someone who would remind you how they are acting?".
At the demarche of the head of the Polish Foreign Ministry answered a member of the Federation Council of Russia, the chairman of the Commission on Information Policy Alexei Pushkov. He believes that the beginning of the Second World War should be considered with the annexation of Germany with the connivance of the West of Czechoslovakia. Poland then also did not miss the moment and "snatched its chunk from it". So who attacked whom, and contributed to the outbreak of World War II - more than clear.