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Warsaw -- A Cold War map detailing the Warsaw Pact's training plans
for a nuclear war has been released by the new Polish government, which pledged
to confront the nation's Communist past.
Dating from 1979, the map reveals how Soviet forces could respond to
a Nato assault by invading Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Red and blue mushroom clouds are marked on the map, showing Soviet
nuclear bombs raining down on cities including Brussels, Antwerp, Munich and
Stuttgart, and Nato nuclear strikes on Warsaw and a line of Polish territory,
cutting the country in two. The Nato objective was to halt a second wave of
Soviet troops sweeping westwards from Russia. Polish military chiefs said yesterday
that about two million people would have died in Poland alone. Meanwhile, Britain
and France appeared to have escaped unscathed, so separate plans may have existed
for them.
The right-wing Polish government sent a powerful political message by releasing
the map from the military archives, reinforcing its tough, nationalistic and
anti-Russian rhetoric.
The Law and Justice party emphasized that key figures in the previous social
democratic government had been members of the Communist regime.
Radoslaw Sikorski, the Defence Minister, said there had been no prior discussions
with Moscow about the release. Explaining how the Soviets had made Poland the
main target for Nato, he argued: "We need to know about our past. Historians
have the right to know the history of the 20th century. If people did some things
they were not proud of, that will be an education for them too.
"I think it is very important for a democracy for the citizens to know
who was who, who was the hero and who was the villain. On that basis we make
democratic choices.
"I think it is also important for the health of civic society for morality
tales to be told: that it pays to be decent and that if you do things that did
not serve the national interest, one day it will come out and you might be called
to account."
Mr Sikorski promised to release 1,700 documents including the statute of the
Warsaw Pact, protocols from its political and military committees and documents
relating to the suppression of the Prague Spring uprising in 1968.
The model for openness is that of the Gauck Institute in Berlin, which made
public the files compiled by the Stasi, the East German secret police. "This
government wants to end the post-Communist period in which the files of the
Warsaw Pact were secret,'' Mr Sikorski said.
Asked whether the release of archive material would recreate social divisions,
and antagonise those who regard Poland's last Communist leader, General Wojciech
Jaruzelski, as a hero, Mr Sikorski replied bluntly: "He is not considered
to be a hero by me.''
Interestingly, the Warsaw Pact training map illustrates a defensive military
operation in response to a Nato nuclear strike, and the Soviet forces appeared
to stop at the English Channel. French territory is also avoided, a fact which
Waldemar Wojcik, head of Poland's central military archive, explained by the
fact that France was outside Nato's integrated military command structure.
Britain does, however, feature on the map and Nato bombers are shown flying
over Bridlington and Ipswich on the way to the Continent, as a separate force
sweeps in from Denmark.
Mr Wojcik added that, on a visit to Washington, Polish military officials had
seen plans from Nato that were "a mirror image" of the Warsaw Pact's
own deadly war plan.