If we define countries that once experienced communism as post-communist, […] then in this sense Germany is a post-Nazi state – said today the chairman of Law and Justice (PiS) Jarosław Kaczyński, responding to a question about reparations for Poland for the damages caused during World War II.
During a press conference at the headquarters of Law and Justice, editor Łukasz Żmuda from TV Republika asked about the issue of reparations from Germany and the progress made in this matter by the current government.
Such a possibility exists, although it is not a short process – admitted Law and Justice chairman Jarosław Kaczyński.
He emphasized that it requires many efforts, and “the condition for achieving it is the unity of all major political forces in this matter.”
Today the country is governed by a formation that is external. It is evident in many decisions that they represent German interests. Take the case of wind turbines – whose interest is that? Primarily that of German companies – he assessed.
He underlined that the fact that Poland never received reparations after World War II is a great success of German diplomacy.
German politicians, even in the 1980s, rejected the peace treaty, openly arguing that it would bring back the issue of reparations – he added.
And further: “this is a deeply dishonest stance, having nothing to do with what Germans like to proclaim and proclaim about themselves – that they are a model democracy, that they have completely rejected the past. They have not rejected it. They did not punish the criminals, they created a system in which criminals built political careers at the highest levels of state administration. And on top of that, they did not pay reparations.”
If we define countries that once experienced communism as post-communist, […] then in this sense Germany is a post-Nazi state – concluded Kaczyński.
