23.06.2015 Views

beyondukraine.euandrussiainsearchofanewrelation

beyondukraine.euandrussiainsearchofanewrelation

beyondukraine.euandrussiainsearchofanewrelation

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Russia, Poland and the “New Europe”: Inevitable Clash? 67<br />

The changes in Central and Eastern Europe that had began in<br />

Poland in 1989 led to the dissolution of the Soviet bloc and<br />

became one of the causes of the USSR’s dissolution in 1991.<br />

Russia was turned into the Russian Federation and a number of<br />

newly independent states (Baltic States, Ukraine, Belarus) became<br />

Poland’s neighbours. The Russian Federation shares a border (on<br />

the northeast) with Poland: it is the so-called enclave of<br />

Kaliningrad. Since 2004, the eastern border of Poland has also<br />

become an important part of the new eastern borders of the<br />

European Union.<br />

It is interesting to note that the first country to recognize the<br />

independence of Ukraine was Poland (in 1991). The Polish policy<br />

of reconciling Ukraine with Europe and the Euro-Atlantic alliance<br />

(in the 1990s we also had hopes of including Belarus, already<br />

ruled by Aleksandr Lukashenko, into this process) was no doubt<br />

influenced by the concepts of a Polish emigré magazine called<br />

Kultura, published in Paris and directed by Jerzy Giedroyc, but<br />

also by the ideas of Professor Zbigniew Brzeziński, sovietologist<br />

and an American of Polish descent. According to these<br />

conceptions an independent Ukraine was to ensure the<br />

independence of Poland.<br />

In the 1990s and the early years of the XXI century, Poland<br />

established a policy of supporting the sovereignty of countries<br />

detaching from the USSR, including Ukraine (the Orange<br />

Revolution) and Georgia (the period of Mikhail Saakashvili’s<br />

presidency). Moscow has always opposed Polish policies of<br />

supporting the independence and development of democracy in<br />

countries like Ukraine or Georgia and for this reason from the<br />

early 1990s until today the relations between Poland and Russia<br />

have been tense and conflicting (except for short periods of thaw<br />

tests).<br />

The government of Donald Tusk – who was Prime Minister of<br />

Poland in the period 2007-2014 – from 2010 to 2013 tried to adopt<br />

the policy of ‘thaw’ or ‘reset’ in relations with Russia (being,<br />

however, strongly opposed by President Lech Kaczyński and the<br />

leader of the main opposition party, the president’s brother,

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!