Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Letter from Lech Walesa

Former President of Poland Lech Walesa wrote the following letter to Trump.

Your Excellency, Mr. President,

We watched the report of your conversation with the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, with fear and distaste. We find it insulting that you expect Ukraine to show respect and gratitude for the material assistance provided by the United States in its fight against Russia. Gratitude is owed to the heroic Ukrainian soldiers who shed their blood in defense of the values of the free world. They have been dying on the front lines for more than 11 years in the name of these values and the independence of their homeland, which was attacked by Putin’s Russia.

We do not understand how the leader of a country that symbolizes the free world cannot recognize this.

Our alarm was also heightened by the atmosphere in the Oval Office during this conversation, which reminded us of the interrogations we endured at the hands of the Security Services and the debates in Communist courts. Prosecutors and judges, acting on behalf of the all-powerful communist political police, would explain to us that they held all the power while we held none. They demanded that we cease our activities, arguing that thousands of innocent people suffered because of us. They stripped us of our freedoms and civil rights because we refused to cooperate with the government or express gratitude for our oppression. We are shocked that President Volodymyr Zelensky was treated in the same manner.

The history of the 20th century shows that whenever the United States sought to distance itself from democratic values and its European allies, it ultimately became a threat to itself. President Woodrow Wilson understood this when he decided in 1917 that the United States must join World War I. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt understood this when, after the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, he resolved that the war to defend America must be fought not only in the Pacific but also in Europe, in alliance with the nations under attack by the Third Reich.

We remember that without President Ronald Reagan and America’s financial commitment, the collapse of the Soviet empire would not have been possible. President Reagan recognized that millions of enslaved people suffered in Soviet Russia and the countries it had subjugated, including thousands of political prisoners who paid for their defense of democratic values with their freedom. His greatness lay, among other things, in his unwavering decision to call the USSR an “Empire of Evil” and to fight it decisively. We won, and today, the statue of President Ronald Reagan stands in Warsaw, facing the U.S. Embassy.

Mr. President, material aid—military and financial—can never be equated with the blood shed in the name of Ukraine’s independence and the freedom of Europe and the entire free world. Human life is priceless; its value cannot be measured in money. Gratitude is due to those who sacrifice their blood and their freedom. This is self-evident to us, the people of Solidarity, former political prisoners of the communist regime under Soviet Russia.

We call on the United States to uphold the guarantees made alongside Great Britain in the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, which established a direct obligation to defend Ukraine’s territorial integrity in exchange for its relinquishment of nuclear weapons. These guarantees are unconditional—there is no mention of treating such assistance as an economic transaction.

Signed,

Lech Wałęsa, former political prisoner, President of Poland

11 comments:

  1. Well said.
    Thanks for posting this.
    Penny

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  2. We remember Lech Walesa and Poland's resistance to the horrors of Soviet communism with huge respect and all the above is true enough. Trump, is a malignant narcissist who can't be swayed by an appeal to history, decency, the rule of law and co-operation between nations as he has never had any respect ever for anything that is honest, and has such a grotesquely huge yet unbelievably fragile ego that this letter will be seen by him as intolerable criticism. If he ever reads it, it will result in his attacking Walesa, Poland, Europe, history and the rest in his inimitable way. Walesa's audience is other politicians and the public, so thanks for sharing as it shows that there is still solidarity out there. Sue x

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  3. Wow, that's powerful. Trump and his cronies won't care, of course, ignorant as they are about history (and basic morality). But maybe it will help reach the American public.

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  4. I read this the other day I have a lot of respect for this man I remember when he was held prisoner after leading the strikes in Gdansk Poland in the 1980s, I believe he was very instrumental in the downfall of the iron curtain, we agreed to guarantee the security of Ukraine, we’re going back on our word it’s as simple as that the amount of money That we’re spending is minuscule compared to so many of the other endeavors, we embarked on, for one is a huge tax breaks that are given to the wealthy in order to “stimulate “the economy I could go on and on here about the poor excuse for a president, but it’s been almost 10 years. It doesn’t matter what I say. It doesn’t matter what he does or is guilty of it seems to fall on deaf years. Paula G

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  5. So true! tRumpt is turning out to be a Russian asset.

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  6. Desde España miramos con temor a un presidente de una gran nación como se esta comportando con un funcionamiento mas de matón de barrio que un presidente democratico

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  7. We are not living in the old time "Cold War" days folks, but Walesa hasn't gotten the memo yet. Those supporting the Ukraine quagmire supported the invasion of Iraq, the Afghanistan debacle, and if they are old enough, were hawks during the Vietnam War. War does not benefit anybody anytime, except the contractors of the military -industrial complex.
    To many sanctimonious fools on this post
    Angel Amore

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    Replies
    1. So true.

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    2. The first paragraph of your comment has some merit, but then you blew it with your second paragraph and lost all my respect.

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  8. To me the MAGA movement is all about the money in the pockets of the rich, their hate and as Amanda said, "Ignorance"!

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  9. Mr. Weleska is certainly to be admired for his bravery and fortitude who, along with Pope John Paul II, Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, brought down the Soviet Union. In 1986 Reagan walked away from an agreement with Gorbachev in Reykjavik Iceland, because Gorbachev wanted us to stop the Strategic Defense Initiative. Reagan was right to not agree to that.

    Does Mr. Weleska have a solution to the current war between Ukraine and Russia beyond continuing to funnel money, (most of which Mr. Zelansky admits cannot be accounted for), forever? When will we run out of money? More Ukrainians will die. More Russians will die. The Budapest Memorandum, in which Ukraine surrendered its nuclear weapons in return for defense from other countries may as well have been a NATO membership. It was a distinction without a difference. Trump is right: Zelensky is gambling with WWIII, and he doesn’t have the cards.

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