The commission aims to scrutinize Russian and Belarusian influence in Poland from 2004 to 2024
- Prime Minister Donald Tusk said the work of a special commission in Poland to investigate Russian and Belarusian influence has started.
- The commission, described as non-partisan, aims to safeguard national security amid regional security concerns.
- Established by Tusk's order in May, the commission will scrutinize Russian and Belarusian influence from 2004 to 2024, focusing on hybrid attacks.
A special commission tasked with investigating Russian and Belarusian influence in Poland was beginning its work on Wednesday, Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced.
At a news conference in Warsaw, Tusk and other officials described the commission as a non-partisan body of experts whose aim is to protect national security. Its work begins at a time of security concerns across the region as Russia’s war against Ukraine is in its third year.
Tusk issued an order in May to establish a commission to investigate Russian and Belarusian influence in the years 2004-2024. He and other Polish officials say the country is facing intensified hybrid attacks from Russia and its neighbor and ally Belarus that include alleged acts of sabotage, cyberattacks and growing pressure along the Poland-Belarus border.
The number of attempted border crossings from Belarus into European Union member Poland has shot up in recent months to almost 400 a day — from only a handful a day earlier this year, Polish officials say. Also, Poland’s border guards have described increasingly aggressive behavior by some migrants on the Belarus side of the border, who in some cases attacked them with rocks or other objects.
Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk speaks during a news conference on June 5, 2024. A special commission tasked with investigating Russian and Belarusian influence in Poland started its work on Wednesday, Tusk announced. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)
Tomasz Siemoniak, who is the interior minister and the head of the secret services, said there are "no doubts" that the situation at the border is the work of Russia and Belarus, and that "explaining all the cases from the last 20 years where traces of Russian or Belarusian activity are visible is very important."
The commission will include 12 members and be headed by the head of the Military Counterintelligence Service, Gen. Jarosław Stróżyk. Tusk noted that Stróżyk has served as a diplomat, military commander and deputy head of NATO intelligence, among other roles.