Andrew Korybko
This might be a false flag to undermine the partial
de-escalation of Polish-Belarusian tensions and provoke a worsening of
Russian-US ones. It also comes six weeks after Russian spies warned about a
joint Polish-Ukrainian “simulated (false flag) attack on critical
infrastructure in Poland”
Polish investigators claim
that a railroad connecting Warsaw with Lublin was damaged by what they believe
to have been an explosion. Prime Minister Donald Tusk wrote on X that
“Blowing up the rail track on the Warsaw-Lublin route is an unprecedented act
of sabotage targeting directly the security of the Polish state and its
civilians. This route is also crucially important for delivering aid to
Ukraine. We will catch the perpetrators, whoever they are.” The context
surrounding this incident is very relevant.
Earlier that day, Poland had
just reopened two border
crossings with Belarus, which it closed in September in response to
that month’s Zapad
2025 drills between Russia and Belarus. On the same day, Chief of the
General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces Wieslaw Kukula also said that
“(Russia) has begun the period of preparing for war. They are building an
environment here intended to create conditions favourable for potential
aggression on Polish territory.” This followed
Tusk’s comments from last week:
“I don’t want to go into details, but I am in no doubt that recent attacks on several digital systems, not just [electronic payment system] BLIK, are the result of deliberate, planned sabotage. And there will be ever more, all over Europe. Because the war Putin is waging against the West is also taking place inside our societies. Putin has tools that can destroy the European Union as an organization, but also Europe as a cultural phenomenon. These tools are Russia’s fifth columns, present in every country of Europe.”
All of this unfolded around
two months after Russian decoy drones entered Polish airspace, most
likely due
to NATO jamming. NATO then tried to shoot them down, but an errant missile
damaged a local home. Tusk’s government lied that a Russian drone was to blame,
however, and his rival President Karol Nawrocki only found out the truth from a
media leak. Readers can learn more about this here,
but the point is that the Polish “deep state” arguably sought to manipulate
Nawrocki into war with Russia.
The events preceding Poland’s
railroad sabotage incident explain why it’s highly suspicious. The Polish “deep
state” already unsuccessfully tried to manipulate the President into war with
Russia and was thus expected to try again sometime soon. His rival, the Prime
Minister, then fearmongered about Russian fifth columns ready to carry out acts
of sabotage all across the West one week before something of the sort seemingly
happened, which coincided with the partial
de-escalation of Polish-Belarusian tensions.
This development advances
Russian interests and could be seen as a tangential outcome of its ongoing
negotiations with the US in spite of Trump’s
sanctions-related escalation a month ago. Accordingly, it doesn’t make
sense for Russia to ruin this with a minor act of sabotage, which predictably
risks reversing the aforesaid, not to mention hardening Trump’s newly
adversarial position by lending credence to warmongers’ claims of Putin’s
supposed perfidy. The only ones who benefit are those same warmongers.
Poland’s railroad sabotage
incident might therefore be a false flag for achieving these two goals,
particularly the worsening of Russian-US tensions, which could occur if
Congress pushes through Lindsey Graham’s bill to punitively tariff Russia’s
trading partners like Trump just
endorsed. The US “deep state”, their Polish counterparts, the UK, and
Ukraine all have an interest in this, and Russian spies recently
warned about a joint Polish-Ukrainian “simulated (false flag) attack
on critical infrastructure in Poland”.
Andrew Korybko, Substack, November 18, 2025
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