Jeopardizing NATO Unity: The Alarming Case of General Gromadziński's Dismissal
Is a group of people with sympathies and a past in communist (subordinate to the USSR) special services eliminating the best Polish commanders from international and NATO structures?
In yesterday's post, we informed you about the revelations unveiled by investigative journalist Piotr Nisztor—a recording of a conversation between the rector of the University of Siedlce, a former officer of the Military Information Services (WSI), and two of his colleagues from the university. This recording suggests that the head of Polish military counterintelligence, General Jarosław Stróżyk, may be under the influence of individuals with roots in and sympathies for Soviet intelligence. These recordings confirm suspicions we've harbored for some time, stemming from a review of the career and connections of the head of the SKW.
Today, we delve deeper into the figure of General Stróżyk or more in his role in the dismissal of the experienced armored commander, General Jarosław Gromadziński, from his position as the commander of the multinational Eurocorps. Eurocorps, located in Strasbourg, France, is a multinational corps headquarters comprising personnel from six framework nations and five associated nations. The framework nations place the Eurocorps at the service of the European Union and, more importantly, NATO, which certified it in 2002 as one of its nine High Readiness Land Headquarters (HRF (L) HQ).
The dismissal of an experienced and distinguished commander, bearing the hallmarks of a strictly political action, casts yet another shadow over a key NATO member state's service at a time of heightened aggressive actions by Russian special services against the alliance.
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