“The note will be prepared in due course in line with the adopted form and custom. Please don’t spoil your own mood – or everyone else’s – with petty nitpicking,” wrote the Head of the Presidential Office for International Policy – Marcin Przydacz, responding on social media to the complaints from the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MSZ).
Yesterday, at the White House, a meeting took place between the Presidents of Poland and the United States. Karol Nawrocki spoke with Donald Trump, and later gave an interview to TV Republika, where he shared a few more details about the talks.
President Nawrocki’s visit is being widely commented on around the world. Indeed, even politicians from Donald Tusk’s government have spoken positively about how it went.
And now they complain about the lack of a note?
Not everyone, however. Anna Radwan-Röhrenschef, Deputy Head of the Polish MSZ, this morning in an interview with Wirtualna Polska complained about the issue of the “lack of a note” from the presidents’ meeting.
“From the information I have this morning, such a document from the Presidential Chancellery has not been received. You mentioned that neither a representative of the MSZ nor the embassy was present at those talks. We deeply regret this, because then we would have known first-hand what the conversation was about and in which direction the particular elements discussed at the press conference had gone,” she said.
Nevertheless – as we have informed you many times – the attitude of Polish diplomacy, led by Radosław Sikorski, before Karol Nawrocki’s visit to the White House was clear.
To these words responded once again on social media the Head of the Presidential Office for International Policy – Marcin Przydacz.
“Warm greetings to the Editor and Madam Minister from the plane above the Atlantic on the way to Rome. The note will be prepared in due course in line with the adopted form and custom. Please don’t spoil your own mood – or everyone else’s – with petty nitpicking,” his post reads.
And as he added – “there will be tasks for the MSZ to carry out.”
