Poland is the only country in NATO, in which so many generals lost their lives in an unnatural way over the past several years! Given the events of the last few decades, such developments should not be called as coincidence of adverse events but rather a well-organized and planned operation to deprive Poland of the best specialists of military tactics.
Over the last decade, as many as eight top generals lost their lives in an unnatural way due to accidents, disasters, or alleged suicides, including commanders of all types of military formations, 1 admiral and 3 colonels. In this respect, our country is a phenomenon among the NATO countries. None of the member states of the Alliance has lost so many top ranking officers and generals in such a short period of time, while not being engaged directly in any armed conflict.
A list of Polish generals, admirals and colonels, who died of unnatural causes in the last decade is as follows:
1. Gen. Brig. pil. Andrzej Andrzejewski - Commander of the 1st Tactical Air Brigade in Świdwin. He died on January 23, 2008, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft CASA C-295 M in Mirosławiec.
2. Col. Dariusz Maciąg - Commander of the 21st Air Base in Swidwin. He died on January 23, 2008, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft CASA C-295 M in Mirosławiec.
3. Col. Jerzy Pilat - Commander of the 12th Air Base in Mirosławiec. He died on January 23, 2008, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft CASA C-295 M in Mirosławiec.
4. Gen. Franciszek Gągor - Chief of General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces. He died on April 10, 2010, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft Tu-154M near Smolensk.
5. Maj. Gen. Tadeusz Buk - Commander of the Polish Land Forces. He died on April 10, 2010, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft Tu-154M near Smolensk.
6. Admiral Andrzej Karweta - Commander of the Polish Navy. He died on April 10, 2010, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft Tu-154M near Smolensk.
7. Maj. Gen. Włodzimierz Potasiński - Commander of the Special Forces of Poland. He died on April 10, 2010, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft Tu-154M near Smolensk.
8. Gen. Bronisław Kwiatkowski - Operational Commander of Polish Armed Forces. He died on April 10, 2010, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft Tu-154M near Smolensk.
9. Gen. Pil. Andrzej Błasik - Commander of the Polish Air Force. He died on April 10, 2010, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft Tu-154M near Smolensk.
10. Gen. Brig. Kazimierz Gilarski - Commander of the Warsaw Garrison. He died on April 10, 2010, as a result of the crash of a military aircraft Tu-154M near Smolensk.
11. Gen. Brig. Sławomir Petelicki – founder and first commander of the Special Operations Unit GROM. He died on June 16, 2012 as a result of a gunshot wound.
12. Col. Sławomir Berdychowski – founder and first commander of the Special Operations Unit AGAT. He died on February 9, 2016, allegedly committing suicide.
Written by Robert Jozef Kucharycz
Photo: K76 Robert Jozef Kycharycz; plus.google.com
Retired Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Senior Scientific Intelligence officer Eugene Poteat, goes on the record:
"The trip to Smolensk was expected to highlight Russia finally admitting culpability in the massacre, after long having blamed it on the Germans, an atrocity they had tried to conceal for over 70 years.
As for the reception committee, it had different ideas. Putin wasn’t looking forward to such an occasion. Into this poisonous reception brew was President Kaczynski’s well-known public criticism of Moscow and Putin, a habit that has ended the lives of others within Russia – and abroad. A few discouraging Russian requirements – that Kaczynski could not attend in any official capacity – did not halt the Poles. Kaczynski would go anyway on non-official, “personal” business. To Russians, such a distinction would be meaningless, not lessening the possible international excoriation of such an event. A problem ripe for a modern, Russian solution: a tragic, ‘natural’ accident."
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