Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 25 – Polish news
outlets are reporting that the Forensic Explosives Laboratory of the British
Defense Ministry found residue of explosives on the vast majority of the 200
parts of the remains of the plane whose crash near Smolensk in 2010 killed
Polish President Lech Kaczyński and members of his party.
Polish radio says that the materials
the British have concluded were affected by an explosion were given to London already
in May 2017. Many Poles have long suspected that Moscow was behind the crash
and have talked openly about the possibility that Russia’s special services placed
a bomb on board (http://www.polradio.pl/5/38/Artykul/412476).
This report will exacerbate not only
the already tense relations between Russia and Poland but also those between
Russia and Ukraine whose media are playing up this story. Moreover, they will
raise new questions about why the West if it had this evidence did not bring it
forward and demand an explanation from Moscow.
Polish and other commentators have
suggested that NATO countries knew the truth about the 2010 plane crash long ago
but did not say so because an attack that killed the president of Poland and
his closest aides could lead to a demand by Warsaw that the alliance invoke
Article 5 which specifies that an attack on one member constitutes an attack on
all.
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