POLISH AFFAIRS
SOVIET INTERFERENCE. ALLEGED BY GENERAL SIKORSKI. (By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright) NEW YORK, February 21. The London correspondent of the “New York Times,” Cyrus Sulzberger, says that the Polish Premier, General Sikorski, in an interview accused Russia of dropping parachutists in central and eastern Poland for the purpose of carrying on political warfare and organizing Communist cells. General Sikorski said that the Polish Government had protested to Moscow against foreign elements intervening in the internal affairs of the Polish State. “I cannot deny that there are very great difficulties with Russia,” the general said. ‘At the Russian-Polish frontier not only the Polish problem is being decided but also the question of peace in Central and Eastern Europe, as well as the whole attitude of the Soviet toward democracy. “A secret Russian radio from Poland is continually appealing for a general Polish uprising, and demanding that I issue orders for the uprising. I cannot order a revolt because of the risk of drowning Poland in a sea of blood. Now is not the time.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 February 1943, Page 3
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173POLISH AFFAIRS Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 February 1943, Page 3
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