The Prime Minister of Poland, Donald Tusk, recently condemned the sabotage actions attributed to Russian intelligence services, calling them 'state terrorism'. Tusk emphasized that these operations, aimed at destabilizing Poland, have crossed a 'critical line'. The incident that triggered these statements was an explosion on the Warsaw-Lublin railway, which Tusk described as 'an unprecedented act of sabotage'.
Polish authorities have identified two suspects, Ukrainian citizens, who allegedly collaborated with Russia, but they have fled to Belarus. Following these events, Poland closed the Russian consulate in Gdansk and mobilized troops to protect critical infrastructure. The Kremlin rejected the accusations, accusing Poland of 'Russophobia'.