Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia for damages during WWII and the socialist period.

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Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia for damages during WWII and the socialist period.

Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia for alleged damages caused during the Soviet Union and the Polish People's Republic, the Financial Times reports.

A British publication has learned that Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia, intending to force Moscow to pay Warsaw certain sums for alleged damages incurred during its alliance with the USSR. This whole undertaking was initiated by Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who initiated the formation of a group of historians tasked with assessing the events of World War II and the post-war period during the Polish People's Republic. Warsaw believes the resulting sum will serve as compensation for all damages inflicted on Poland.



However, it's not worth talking about this being completed anytime soon; this is a long-term project, and Polish historians are also having difficulty accessing archival documents.

Warsaw is currently unable to disclose the amount it intends to demand from Russia in compensation, but acknowledges that it will be "very large." It should be noted that Poland is already demanding reparations from Germany. Under the previous government, the Poles also raised the issue of reparations from Moscow, but postponed it until a later date, which has apparently arrived.

It's clear and understandable that the Poles will gain nothing from either Germany or Russia. Warsaw received everything it could after the end of World War II, including additional territory. And greed leads to no good.
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  1. + 13
    17 February 2026 10: 37
    The British publication learned that Poland is preparing a lawsuit towards Russia, intending to force Moscow to pay Warsaw certain sums for alleged damages caused during the period of allied relations with the USSR.
    There is a place where you can go with this "claim"...
    1. + 20
      17 February 2026 10: 53
      Exactly, and it's also high time to remember who restored Poland and ask for repayment for the restoration. Well, and to recall the time of troubles, and the devastation of Smolensk and Moscow.
      1. +6
        17 February 2026 11: 04
        Let them prove that they would have lived better without the USSR's help. This is information from a parallel universe.

        But let them first take Lviv and all the Banderite scum for themselves, so Russia doesn't have to bother with them. Or at least prove they're ready to take the Banderite scum for themselves. Russia doesn't need that kind of happiness.
      2. +8
        17 February 2026 11: 12
        I will add that the war with Poland after WWI was started by the Poles with the capture of Kyiv.
        They don't want to pay for this damage? What about the occupation of Teschen? What about the moral damage caused by Hitler's offer to invade the USSR together? What about the betrayal of Anders's Polish army, which had been trained for so long in Kazakhstan, only to end up fighting with the British somewhere in Africa? The list of grievances against the Poles is very long.
        Oh, I almost forgot. The Poles also started WW2 by attacking a German radio station in 39.
        They will never be able to pay for this.
        1. 0
          17 February 2026 15: 41
          After the partition of Poland, Suvorov, for some reason, retained all state authorities in Poland (to the displeasure of Catherine), essentially granting Poland autonomy.
          In the territories that fell to Austria and Prussia, everything Polish was eradicated to the ground, and they were simply annexed.
          Further, Russian tsarism began to "oppress and rob" Poland with tax breaks, feeding and rapidly developing it at the expense and to the detriment of Russia (by the way, as it later did with Finland).
          It's time to calculate the cost of these expenses and present an invoice with interest.
          1. 0
            17 February 2026 15: 53
            Quote: Captain Pushkin
            After the partition of Poland, Suvorov, for some reason, kept everything in Poland

            The consequence of the easy capture of Warsaw. The control could have been changed 100 times afterward.
            1. 0
              19 February 2026 12: 02
              Quote: multicaat
              Quote: Captain Pushkin
              After the partition of Poland, Suvorov, for some reason, kept everything in Poland

              The consequence of the easy capture of Warsaw. The control could have been changed 100 times afterward.

              "Change later" is a new war. That's why Catherine didn't undo what Suvorov (who, by the way, was an ardent monarchist himself, yet preserved the trappings of democracy in Poland) had done.
      3. +7
        17 February 2026 11: 14
        Quote from: topol717
        Exactly, and also It's high time to remember who rebuilt Poland and ask for restitution for the restoration.Well, let's recall the time of troubles and the devastation of Smolensk and Moscow.

        The Germans sent the Poles to their destination - they are looking for someone to shake them off?
        I think that as a result of the mutual settlements, Poland will not only be left without pants, but will also be in debt for several generations.

        Remember the film about Komsomol volunteers? How Ulyanov's character rebuilt the Berlin subway? My relative, who took Berlin with his mortar, returned home in 1957 as a civil engineer, rebuilding Poland.
      4. 0
        17 February 2026 11: 22
        Quote from: topol717
        It's high time to remember who restored Poland and ask for restitution for the restoration. And to recall the time of troubles, and the devastation of Smolensk and Moscow.


        The point? To look like idiots in the eyes of others? Knowing in advance that no one will pay anyone anything.
        1. +5
          17 February 2026 11: 45
          Of course they won't pay, but you have to ask. And loudly. Both for the concentration camps and for supporting the fascists.
    2. + 11
      17 February 2026 11: 04
      aszzz888
      Today, 10: 37
      There is a place where you can go with this "claim"

      hi To begin negotiations on a deal, it is necessary to return Danzig, Stettin, Breslau, East Brandenburg, East Prussia, Pomerania and Silesia to Russia as generous gifts from I. Stalin, as well as pay for the restoration of the economy in the post-war period. But most importantly, the lives of hundreds of thousands of Soviet Red Army soldiers are not subject to any assessment other than the final partition of the ungrateful country and its incorporation into the Russian Federation, and to facilitate the Russophobic inhabitants' transfer to the Garden of Eden of Gayropa of the incompetent Kallas and the militant von der Klein. am
      1. -9
        17 February 2026 11: 20
        Danzig, Stettin, Breslau, East Brandenburg, East Prussia and Pomerania with Silesia
        - These are German cities in the Tatar understanding, since these names mean nothing in German, they are formed from Slavic names - Wroclaw, Gdansk, etc. ... Tatars do not understand this, in general, almost all the names of European countries - England, France, and even Greece (see the Vasmer dictionary) - in Russian from Polish ... that is why the post-Horde ideas about Europe in the Russian Federation are very vague
    3. +3
      17 February 2026 11: 30
      Quote: aszzz888
      There is a place where you can go with this "claim".

      And there is a place to "send" them.
      “And now, when all these advantages and all this help were lost and abandoned, England, leading France behind it, offers to guarantee the integrity of Poland - that same Poland, which only six months ago with the greed of a hyena took part in the robbery and destruction of the Czechoslovak state” . (Winston Churchill)
      1. -3
        17 February 2026 11: 39
        Hitler annexed the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia between October 1 and 10, 1938. This happened immediately after the signing of the Munich Agreement (September 30, 1938), in which Britain gave the Sudetenland to the Germans... Churchill looks rather dull in comparison.

        Only after Nazi Germany completed the annexation of the Sudetenland did Poland, on September 21, 1938, demand the transfer of the Cieszyn (Zaolzie) region, where the majority of the Polish population lived.
        1. +1
          17 February 2026 12: 22
          Quote: bondov
          On September 21, 1938, Poland demanded the transfer of the Cieszyn region (Zaolzie), where the predominant Polish population lived.

          In 1938, 80 Poles and 120 Czechs lived in the Tesin region, which belonged to Czechoslovakia.
          When the squabbles between the Czech Republic and Poland began in 1920, Czechoslovak President Masaryk declared that if his wishes weren't heeded, his country would enter the Soviet-Polish War on the side of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. The Poles made concessions, and in July 1920, the region was divided along the Olša River, to the Czechs' advantage (Czechoslovakia received 58,1% of the territory, inhabited by 67,9% of the population). The eastern, smaller part went to Poland, and the western, Zaolzie, to Czechoslovakia. Cieszyn itself was divided in half. Ethnic composition was not taken into account during the division, but in fact, the Polish population was a minority in the western part, although in some areas it predominated.
        2. -1
          17 February 2026 12: 25
          Quote: bondov
          Hitler annexed the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia between October 1 and 10, 1938.

          The downvote isn't mine, but I'll replace it with an upvote. I don't like downvoting decent people.
        3. 0
          17 February 2026 14: 14
          The Munich Agreement was signed by Chamberlain.
        4. 0
          17 February 2026 15: 19
          What does Churchill have to do with this?
          I don't think he was in Munich.
    4. +2
      17 February 2026 11: 47
      Quote: aszzz888
      A British publication has learned that Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia, intending to force Moscow to pay Warsaw certain sums for alleged damages caused during its alliance with the USSR.

      It's surprising that, alongside these claims, the gentlemen forgot to once again accuse Russia of the crash of their government plane near Smolensk in 2010. After all, it's clear that the disaster was orchestrated by the treacherous Muscovites.
      1. ANB
        +2
        17 February 2026 11: 56
        It is clear that the catastrophe was orchestrated by the treacherous Muscovites.

        They taught the Poles how to make vodka. The passengers got drunk and crashed the plane. It's clearly Russia's fault. :)
    5. 0
      17 February 2026 12: 59
      And how much will it be in Oreshniki?
    6. 0
      17 February 2026 17: 51
      If you were to paraphrase all of Poland's wishes, you'd get a beautiful answer, a meme, so to speak. Sir, why do you need so much? It's greed and nothing personal. hi
  2. The comment was deleted.
  3. + 14
    17 February 2026 10: 38
    And they don’t want to pay compensation for the death of 600,000 of our soldiers and officers during the liberation of Poland?
    1. + 10
      17 February 2026 10: 54
      And for the enormous financial assistance the USSR provided to Warsaw after the war! The Soviet Union literally raised Poland from ruins, spending trillions on it.
      1. -15
        17 February 2026 11: 08
        The USSR annexed practically entire Polish cities—Lviv, Vilnius, and Ivano-Frankivsk—to Ukraine and Lithuania, while also ceding Wroclaw and Szczecin, which had been heavily damaged during the war. Gdansk, contrary to popular belief in Russia, did not belong to Germany, but was a free city, whose foreign relations and defense Poland was responsible for. Furthermore, some believe that Germany would never have dared to attack Poland if not for the pact with the USSR.
        1. +9
          17 February 2026 11: 10
          Enough of this nonsense about the pact, that nonsense has long since been completely and utterly destroyed. Did he palm off cities? The USSR gave away so much territory from Germany to the Poles that they never even dreamed of, those filthy Poles.
          1. -14
            17 February 2026 11: 12
            In their delirium, they tore it apart, and the pact and protocol were officially condemned by the Congress of People's Deputies of the USSR in December 1989. The Congress declared the protocols delimiting spheres of interest with Nazi Germany legally invalid and void from the moment of signing, condemning the fact of their conclusion. No one has reversed this decision to this day.
            1. +7
              17 February 2026 11: 17
              What happened in the late 80s and early 90s was nothing short of absurd. Falsified history was pouring out of every crack, and who was pushing all this? It's time to stop living in the past. All the statements and actions of the leadership at that time were aimed at one thing: the collapse of our country. And all these Volkogonovs, Korotichs, and other democrats were riding high, and people ate it up and believed it. But in the end, we were all fooled.
              1. -10
                17 February 2026 11: 25
                It'll soon be 40 years since the conviction, but for some reason the "falsification" hasn't been overturned. By the way, there weren't any suckers at the convention - all the documents have undergone the appropriate examinations...
                1. +2
                  17 February 2026 12: 10
                  What a naive person you are... Don't be lazy, watch Yegor Yakovlev, Spitsyn, Kalpakidi, then everything will fall into place in your head.
                  1. -5
                    17 February 2026 12: 11
                    Well, it needs to be cancelled - what's the problem?
                    otherwise this gives Poland every reason to make claims
                  2. -4
                    17 February 2026 13: 28
                    What a naive person you are.
                    What does this have to do with me? - It was the congress deputies who were naive back then, but you, very smart - were not a congress deputy back then, and not even a Duma deputy now...
        2. +1
          17 February 2026 11: 21
          Quote: bondov
          Moreover, there is an opinion that Germany would never have dared to attack Poland if it were not for the pact with the USSR...

          There are documents according to which the Polish General Staff planned to attack Germany.
          So OUT dependence on the USSR - the Third Reich would have attacked Poland anyway, either of its own free will or in response to aggression.
          In addition, Hitler knew about the Anglo-Polish military agreement against attack EUROPEAN powers

          Quote: bondov
          Almost entire Polish cities – Lviv, Vilnius, and Ivano-Frankivsk – were taken, and Wroclaw and Szczecin, which were heavily damaged during the war, were also thrown in...
          oh, sorry, I had to bomb a little, otherwise the Polish army and government fizzled out too quickly at the time - unlike the Germans.
          Let them thank Japan for signing the peace treaty with the USSR on September 16th regarding Khalkhin Gol, and not on the 1st or 2nd. Poland would have surrendered in a day if the USSR hadn't entered on the 17th.
          1. -7
            17 February 2026 12: 05
            At least you're writing something correctly - the USSR invaded on September 17, which is why the Reich won.

            Guido Knopp. History of the Wehrmacht, p. 42:

            Finally, the final factor that ultimately decided Poland's fate was the Red Army's attack in the east—a blow that struck the already exhausted Polish armed forces in the back. The war against Poland created a myth, quickly and readily believed by both the Germans and their enemies—that the Wehrmacht was an invincible and ultra-modern military machine. However, the lightning-fast victory over Poland came at a high cost to the Wehrmacht: the army's losses nearly exceeded acceptable limits: over 16 German soldiers were killed. However, there were even heavier losses:
            Almost 50% of the division's equipment was disabled. These gaps were only closed by the spring of 1940. Furthermore, the Germans had expended most of their ammunition. Rapidly replenishing their reserves was out of the question, as German industrial capacity fell far short of the Wehrmacht's needs. The steel industry was short 600,000 tons of steel per month, and increasing gunpowder production was out of the question. Only the fact that the battle with Poland was practically won by September 18 saved Germany from a grave situation.
            at the front.
            ...
            1. +4
              17 February 2026 12: 12
              What world are you living in? By September 17th, the Polish government had already fled to hell! Poland was practically finished and had no chance against Germany. They lived in the illusions of the 20s, relying on the most powerful cavalry, but in the end, no Poles.
              1. -6
                17 February 2026 12: 18
                The government was heading towards the Hungarian border, but by the 17th it had not yet left the territory... but this is not important, since no one declared capitulation and the war continued after September 17th
            2. +2
              17 February 2026 12: 19
              Quote: bondov
              Finally, the final factor that finally decided Poland's fate was the Red Army's attack in the east, a blow that struck the already exhausted Polish armed forces in the back.

              Quote: bondov
              Just that 18 By September the battle with Poland had already been practically won,

              author it's amazing..
              It turns out that the heart of the "hyena of Europe" was in Brest - our forces entered Brest and the Germans immediately won the war in 1 day...

              Rezun re-logged out?????!!!!
        3. +4
          17 February 2026 11: 35
          Poland signed the pact with the Third Reich long before the USSR! Furthermore, Warsaw was an ally of Hitler and eagerly participated in the partition of Czechoslovakia.
        4. 0
          17 February 2026 11: 55
          This opinion is nothing new.

          Poland had its own agreement with the Germans:
          Pilsudski-Hitler Pact of January 26, 1934
          The Poles don't seem to remember him.
          And not only the Poles
          1. -8
            17 February 2026 12: 10
            Not even a full year had passed since Hitler came to power on January 26, 1934. Tell me, what bad things did the Fuhrer manage to do during this time?
    2. +6
      17 February 2026 11: 27
      Quote: moreman78
      А compensation for the death of 600,000 of our soldiers and officers When Poland is liberated, they don't want to pay?

      I wouldn't be surprised if today's Poles say that they didn't ask to be released.

      They no longer remember that Hitler destroyed 6 out of 18 million Poles.
      They also don’t remember that the remaining 12 million were intended to fertilize the fields with their ashes.
      They forgot that the territory populated by Poles was supposed to be ENTIRELY populated by Germans. The Germans had no alternative for the Poles except the ovens. 1938, when Hitler threw them a piece, was not Poland's fate. The Poles' fate was to be ashes.
      If they don't believe me, let them ask Merz...

      They're talking a lot in Europe right now about how it's time to redraw the map. Naturally, they're also talking about dismembering Russia.
      My opinion is that they're right. The time has come. Just don't use scissors, but an eraser. Wipe out this perpetual stench right next to Russia, and the air in Europe will be cleaner. Wipe out one stinking island in Europe, and the whole world will breathe a sigh of relief.
      In general, there is something for our "cartographers" in the General Staff to think about...
    3. 0
      17 February 2026 12: 19
      moreman78
      And they don’t want to pay compensation for the death of 600,000 of our soldiers and officers during the liberation of Poland?

      This isn't about Europe. They refuse to accept it and consider liberation from fascism an occupation of the USSR. And they couldn't care less how many soldiers died there or were exterminated in camps.
    4. 0
      17 February 2026 12: 21
      Quote: moreman78
      And they don’t want to pay compensation for the death of 600,000 of our soldiers and officers during the liberation of Poland?

      For them, this is not liberation but a defeat.
  4. +9
    17 February 2026 10: 38
    What's the plan? If Germany sent them packing, Moscow will definitely send them on a walking sex tour.
    1. +5
      17 February 2026 10: 45
      Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia...to force Moscow to pay Warsaw certain amounts.

      We'll pay them off if they really want to. No excuses will be accepted.
    2. -1
      17 February 2026 10: 50
      No, our beloved guarantor will remain silent as always, pondering another brilliant multi-move
      1. +1
        17 February 2026 11: 55
        The guarantor simply doesn't give a damn what the Poles yap. If you bark back at every cur, you'll sink to their level.
      2. +1
        17 February 2026 12: 22
        roosei
        .........thinking over another brilliant multi-move

        What are your suggestions? Maybe I should file a complaint against the Polish authorities with the League of Sexual Minorities? Don't write nonsense.
    3. +2
      17 February 2026 11: 07
      What does a dog expect when it barks at an elephant?
      1. -1
        17 February 2026 12: 24
        kulemin0025gmail.com
        What is the little dog counting on?

        This Moska has jaws like a hyena.
    4. +3
      17 February 2026 11: 16
      Quote: Murmur 55
      What is the calculation for?

      The EU is preparing for war. They need pretexts and tension so that the onset of aggression is perceived as natural and considered normal. It's one thing to attack peaceful Russians, and quite another to attack vicious Russians who have done nothing but harm Poland and don't want to repay their enormous debt. The people are buying into this narrative, and it's replacing reality.
    5. +3
      17 February 2026 11: 46
      Quote: Murmur 55
      What's the plan? If Germany sent them packing, Moscow will definitely send them on a walking sex tour.

      That's why Sergei Viktorovich Lavrov, as reparation, waves three fingers under their noses, sets a three-letter direction, and, before leaving, utters his two magic words, the ones that get you banned here. And with that, the Poles, with their wish lists and string bags, will depart.
  5. +8
    17 February 2026 10: 40
    The Poles are clearly competing with the Baltic tigers to see who is smarter.
  6. +1
    17 February 2026 10: 41
    Let us recall that Poland is already demanding reparations from Germany; under the previous government, the Poles also raised the issue of reparations from Moscow, but postponed it until a later time, which has apparently come.

    Let us remember that the previous times Poland was divided by the Russians and the Germans.
    1. +6
      17 February 2026 10: 49
      To be precise, the original participants in the division were Prussia, Austria, and Russia. Perhaps we should suggest repeating history again?
      1. +6
        17 February 2026 10: 57
        Maybe I should suggest repeating the story again? )))
        Russia doesn't need these Polish skunks. Let them stew in their own shit.
      2. 0
        17 February 2026 11: 51
        Austrians are also formally Germans.
      3. 0
        17 February 2026 21: 46
        Quote: roosei
        To be precise, initially Prussia, Austria and Russia participated in the division.

        "- Romanian.
        - So he's a Bulgarian.
        - What's the difference? wassat
        If anyone needs a refresher, it's the Poles. As for me, the Prussians are no different from the Austrians—Germans are Germans. The "G" varieties are left to the specialists, like the so-called "roosei."request
  7. +4
    17 February 2026 10: 42
    ❝ Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia for alleged damages. during the existence of the Soviet Union and the Polish People's Republic ❞ —

    — They want to return to the borders before the Polish People's Republic or the Kingdom of Poland...
    (You will still answer to us for Susanin)
  8. +3
    17 February 2026 10: 42
    Won't they choke on their dicks???? However, their poverty could buy them a flag and a drum around their necks; let them head the list of those running...
  9. +5
    17 February 2026 10: 46
    It's clear she won't get anything. This is simply part of the general trend of fighting Russia. Everyone barks and bites her as best they can. And what can you demand? Russia remains silent and patient, only making excuses periodically, like the victim.
    Perhaps European courts will even award reparations to Russia for World War II. A solid political advantage that could translate into economic gain.
    A toothless attitude toward total hostility has led to this; now we live in a perpetual state of guilt. And they'll even force us to repent in a generation for attacking the 404th.
  10. +2
    17 February 2026 10: 47
    Well, congratulations to our domestic anti-Sovietists. All sensible people warned about such lawsuits. With the USSR portrayed as a criminal state, it was only a matter of time. There's no point in laughing or being ironic. Our Western partners will definitely benefit from this.
    1. -2
      17 February 2026 11: 48
      + a lot
      But our anti-Sovietists will either not get this simple idea or they will pretend that it will not get through.
    2. 0
      17 February 2026 17: 43
      There, see?
      There are plenty of them here too.
  11. +7
    17 February 2026 10: 47
    Well done Poles )))) and the whole story of their half-country is like this: give me money! give me money!
    1. +3
      17 February 2026 10: 55
      Well done Poles )))) and the whole story of their half-country is like this: give me money! give me money!
      They behaved in exactly the same way in the pre-war years, until Aloizych showed them where the crayfish spend the winter.
    2. +1
      17 February 2026 11: 08
      Yes, yes, it reminded me exactly
      he was stopped by an impudent
      a beggar with a gold tooth. Stepping on the strings trailing behind him
      from his underpants, the beggar grabbed Alexander Ivanovich by the hand and quickly
      muttered:
      -- Give me a million, give me a million, give me a million! After that
      the beggar stuck out his thick, unclean tongue and carried the already perfect
      nonsense. He was an ordinary beggar half-idiot, the kind you often see
      found in southern cities
    3. -1
      17 February 2026 11: 47
      Psheki are slightly more successful chubys
      (Okay, more than a little stronger, they had a powerful period in the 16th-17th century)
  12. +1
    17 February 2026 10: 48
    How can you try to raise money and at the same time pretend that this is how it happened, pawns, and you can come up with something even dumber, the info-gypsies are now bursting with envy.
  13. +8
    17 February 2026 10: 48
    It is necessary to prepare a counterclaim based on the existing and recorded assistance of the USSR to the Polish People's Republic.
    September 13, 2019, 4:19 PM www.mid.ru
    On the assistance rendered by the USSR to Poland in the post-war years
    After the liberation of Poland by the Red Army, the Soviet Union embarked on a large-scale program to rebuild the country's economy, devastated by the Nazis. In doing so, the Soviet government acted selflessly, often sacrificing its own interests to strengthen the newly independent Polish state.

    At the end of 1944, Poland was granted an interest-free loan of 10 million rubles. At the beginning of 1945, loans of 50 million rubles and 10 million dollars were issued.

    At the same time, 45 thousand tons of coal, 3 thousand tons of kerosene, 280 thousand tons of motor oil, 6 thousand tons of salt, and 60 tons of tea were delivered.

    From March to November 1945, more than one and a half billion rubles worth of food, medicine, and fuel were allocated. Supplies included 150 head of cattle, 20 tons of cotton, 2 tons of unwashed wool, 100 large hides, and seeds for sowing.

    In February 1945, the Polish government's request for logistical assistance amounting to 50% of the costs of the plan to rebuild Warsaw's main districts was granted. Soviet architects, using documents from the USSR archives, assisted in the development and implementation of a complex and costly project to recreate the historic appearance of the country's capital. Polish builders claimed that half of the rebuilt Warsaw consisted of Soviet cement and brick.

    In 1947, the USSR sent thousands of tons of grain and other foodstuffs to the Poles, which made it possible to avoid a large-scale famine in Poland due to drought.

    In 1948, Warsaw signed an agreement with Moscow to supply Soviet industrial equipment worth almost half a billion dollars, ultimately free of charge.

    In lieu of the Soviet share of the reparations that Germany was supposed to pay ($10 billion), Poland received financial and logistical assistance totaling approximately $1 billion (mainly in the form of various industrial and agricultural equipment and property).

    When the US, British and French governments stopped reparations deliveries to the Soviet Union from the western zones of occupation of Germany in 1947, deliveries to Poland continued as part of the reparations coming from the eastern zone, and then the GDR.

    Thanks to the growth of trade turnover between Poland and the USSR, by 1949 industrial production in Poland had increased
    2,5 times, the economic return from the sale of Polish industrial goods increased by more than 200% compared to pre-war years.
    By 1950, the total value of trade turnover exceeded $1 billion, and the country increased the number of jobs with an industrial component
    to record levels for the entire period of independent Poland's existence.

    As a result, the first three-year plan for the recovery of the Polish economy, developed by Warsaw and Moscow, was implemented ahead of schedule, after which a six-year stage of industrialization began in Poland (1950-1955).

    With the active support of the USSR, heavy industry and mechanical engineering developed in Poland. By 1955, Polish production
    in terms of volume, it has grown by 2,5 times compared to
    with the figures from the beginning of the six-year plan (1950). The number of agricultural cooperatives by 1955 had increased by 14,3 times compared to 1950.

    Since the mid-1950s, with the recovery of the Polish economy, there was no longer a need for unilateral material, technical, and financial assistance from the USSR. Priority was given to expanding mutually beneficial and equitable trade and economic cooperation.
  14. +6
    17 February 2026 10: 51
    Poland owes Russia 1 trillion euros for the death of tens of thousands of captured Red Army soldiers in a Polish concentration camp in 1921-1922.
  15. +1
    17 February 2026 10: 52
    It's not for nothing that the Poles are preparing "some kind of lawsuits" against the fascists and then against us. They've taken out a ton of loans to purchase military equipment, the financial situation in the EU isn't improving, and the Poles are a subsidized country. What will they eat? In short, they've made a mess of things in Ukraine, and it's time to clean up the mess.
  16. +4
    17 February 2026 10: 53
    It would be good for us to collect our debt from these stinkers for the liberation of Poland, where 600 thousand of our soldiers died!
  17. +1
    17 February 2026 10: 54
    The Poles refuse to answer for Sigismund and Hetman Zholkevsky during the sieges of Pskov and Moscow in convertible currency?? The hyena has completely lost its way in its greed and impunity.
  18. 0
    17 February 2026 10: 56
    Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia.

    2022 - Poland files lawsuit against Germany
    2023 - Poland was actively discussing a similar lawsuit against Slovakia (but did not file it)
    At the same time, claims were made against Ukraine (Volyn events)
    2026 - A lawsuit against Russia is being prepared
    I wonder who's next?)
    1. 0
      17 February 2026 11: 09
      sad Will they have time to plan the next one?
    2. -1
      17 February 2026 11: 45
      Sweden?
      They had powerful graters in the 17th century.
  19. +1
    17 February 2026 10: 58
    The next one is the next move.
    Send them through the forest to where they have already been taken...
  20. +3
    17 February 2026 11: 03
    We should slap them with a counterclaim demanding the return of everything the USSR invested in it. All of Poland wouldn't be enough to pay off that debt.
  21. +6
    17 February 2026 11: 04
    A nation of bastards. My uncle, Leonid Dmitrievich Sokolov, a sergeant awarded two Orders of the Patriotic War and two Medals for Courage, died at the age of 22 on May 9, 45, fighting in northern Poland. He was buried in a mass grave along with 260 Red Army soldiers in the city of Kolbin. A nation of bastards. Nothing more to add.
  22. +1
    17 February 2026 11: 07
    This scum must be scattered into separate semi-voivodships and put in charge of the Prussians. Let them use this bastard as the devil pulls his strings! This isn't even hostility anymore, it's psychological. They're completely degenerating, they're turning on the self-destruct mechanism!
  23. 0
    17 February 2026 11: 09
    Living on this planet is becoming more and more amazing.
  24. -1
    17 February 2026 11: 11
    Should we also issue a bill for the restoration of the Polish People's Republic itself and the provision of the USSR market?
  25. +4
    17 February 2026 11: 17
    Prepare a counterclaim so that they pay for what was restored, compensation for the relatives of the soldiers who died in Poland, for what was built, and the icing on the cake—for the territories annexed to the Poles by Stalin.
  26. 0
    17 February 2026 11: 20
    Warsaw has not yet been able to announce the amount it intends to demand from Russia as compensation.

    The more they count, the further they will be sent.
  27. -2
    17 February 2026 11: 23
    [QuotePoland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia for damages during WWII and the socialist period.] [/ Quote]
    We live in Russia, where poverty and prison are never a safe bet. The scary thing is that our liberal business community, and not just the elite, will pay for the sake of "aligning themselves with Western values."
  28. 0
    17 February 2026 11: 27
    Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia for alleged damages caused to it during the existence of the Soviet Union and the Polish People's Republic.

    In that case, Russia will take back what it owed as a result of WWII—Prussia and Silesia. Russia is giving Western Ukraine to Poland for free.
  29. +1
    17 February 2026 11: 28
    A friendly Russian-German border is the basis of peace and stability throughout the world.
  30. 0
    17 February 2026 11: 41
    Quote: bondov
    Moreover, there is an opinion that Germany would never have dared to attack Poland if it were not for the pact with the USSR...

    There is an opinion that it is time to remind the Poles about:
    1) The USSR and Germany signed not a pact, but a treaty on cooperation, trade, and peace. In 1938, they were almost the last to do so. Poland and Hitler were the first to sign a pact on mutual military attack on the USSR, much earlier than 1938.
    2) Germany invaded Poland after years of Polish threats to "take Berlin in a week!" Poland, a puppet of England and France, had been pitted against all its neighbors for years. Just like now. Everyone knows how it ended: within a week, Poland as a state was gone. The Polish government, abandoning its people and army but taking its gold reserves, fled to its puppeteers in England.
  31. +1
    17 February 2026 11: 44
    We need to file a lawsuit for the Intervention during the Time of Troubles, Ivan Susanin, and so on.
    1. 0
      17 February 2026 12: 50
      And to Tusk personally. Perhaps the absurdity of his own claims will dawn on him. request
  32. 0
    17 February 2026 11: 54
    Poland is preparing a lawsuit against Russia for damages...

    We should also finally deal with the Katyn massacre, which, for some reason, in the wild 90s, liberals recognized as the work of the NKVD, and also present an invoice for the war of the 20s and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of our prisoners of war in Polish camps from hunger, disease, and abuse by the Poles.
    Perhaps we should also think about the Poles servicing the death camps located on Polish territory during the Great Patriotic War,
    1. +1
      17 February 2026 15: 59
      We've long since figured it out: ALL the documents on the Soviet investigation were handed over to the Poles, and since then the Poles haven't had any questions for us: the documents contain irrefutable evidence of the USSR's non-involvement in the execution of Polish soldiers at Katyn.
      1. 0
        18 February 2026 09: 48
        The Poles were given ALL the documents on the Soviet investigation...the documents contain irrefutable evidence of the USSR's non-involvement in the execution of Polish soldiers in Katyn.

        Then it's not clear what's wrong with the statement.
        In April 1990, TASS published a statement that
        that the execution of the Poles was carried out by the NKVD,
        responsibility for the execution lies with Beria and Merkulov, and
        The decision to execute was made by the Politburo of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) on March 5, 1940.

        Or does this not apply to the recognition of the USSR's guilt in the execution of Poles in Katyn???
  33. 0
    17 February 2026 11: 57
    I wasn't planning to comment, but I must. The Polish People's Republic, with Soviet assistance, not only rebuilt itself after the war under a new, more just system, albeit far from socialist, but also lifted millions of people out of poverty and ignorance, giving them a chance at a better life. Its predecessor, now called the Second Polish Republic, was a repressive regime divided between the "best" nobility and everyone else. This system condemned the majority to poverty, and today we are witnessing a return to this system, with those in power doing everything they can to distract attention from increasingly limited access to everything from healthcare to education and unaffordable housing. Any Polish politician, even a rank-and-file Marxist, will be exposed as a worthless liar.
    1. 0
      17 February 2026 12: 03
      Please remove the article as soon as possible, immediately after my comment, thank you.
  34. +1
    17 February 2026 12: 05
    Quote: ZovSailor
    To begin negotiations on the deal, it is necessary to return Danzig, Stettin, Breslau, East Brandenburg, East Prussia and Pomerania with Silesia to Russia as generous gifts.

    Uh-huh. Yes Gdansk has a good port. It will become a second Kaliningrad.
    For example, Rokossovsky was the "governor" of Warsaw after WWII. And the city was razed to the ground. And our people didn't go home, but stayed to rebuild. After Auschwitz, our doctors rushed to resuscitate prisoners because only we had the experience of reviving the citizens of Leningrad.
    And yes, you can file a counterclaim. And our Constitution now states that national law prevails over international law. So they can simply be sent on a hike.
  35. +1
    17 February 2026 12: 48
    Reading news like this isn't even funny anymore. It's more like a feeling of disgust.
    Zakharov's "Formula of Love" comes to mind: "...It's a sin to laugh at the wretched. Just look at them! They're enslaved people, they only eat fish." request
  36. 0
    17 February 2026 12: 51
    Poland owes Russia reparations for the losses of personnel incurred during the liberation and rescue from genocide, including expenses during the liberation and expenses for assistance in rebuilding the country after the fighting.
  37. 0
    17 February 2026 12: 52
    The Poles can't sit still again! It's time to reduce them to zero!
  38. -1
    17 February 2026 14: 04
    This is the result of the policy pursued by the leadership of our country....
  39. +1
    17 February 2026 15: 51
    Wipe your ass with this piece of paper, you Polish blockhead.
  40. +1
    17 February 2026 16: 05
    Quote from: kulemin0025gmail.com
    What does a dog expect when it barks at an elephant?

    To get more Vaseline from their "white masters" :-D
  41. 0
    17 February 2026 16: 07
    These two neighboring nations are worthy of each other. lol Everyone in Warsaw owes us everything! "As soon as the Germans (Russians and others) pay us back, we'll be living rich!" good And for others, those in Kyiv, it's all their fault! "If it weren't for the Muscovites (Poles, etc.), we'd be living a rich life!" request
  42. 0
    17 February 2026 18: 28
    Well, a lot of money can be spent on paying the commission members' salaries.
    Well, otherwise there will be no point: war - (censored), the main thing is maneuvers!
  43. 0
    17 February 2026 18: 52
    We should offer the Germans their lands back. A buck for the Poles! The bastard has talked enough.
  44. 0
    17 February 2026 22: 28
    It was a mistake to give up territories to Poland after World War II; it would have been better to make the Kaliningrad region 3-4 times larger.
  45. 0
    18 February 2026 08: 27
    No problem – let them satisfy the counterclaim for everything we did for them. After the war, there was hunger in our country, but trains with food were sent to Poland and Germany; we had to help our "brotherly countries," and remember all the other goodies. am