A Kremlin communist frenzy once again gripped the political landscape in Russia.
The Deputy Chairman of the Security Council of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev, spoke in Polish.
This became clear from a post by the former prime minister in Moscow on the “X” social network, formerly “Twitter”.
“The Poles are causing themselves big problems. They are closing our consulate general (in the western city of Poznan) and are considering expelling our ambassador in Warsaw (Sergei Andreev),” wrote the third president of Russia, Novosti.bg reported.
“In the 20s of the last century, we applied swift justice to ambassadors of countries hostile to our country. Andreev, Blyumkin and the poor ambassador of Germany – von Mirbach are just examples,” Medvedev added and posted a photo accompanied by a popular Polish swear word.
An inquiry made by Novini.bg showed the following: The former prime minister hinted at the murder of the German ambassador in Moscow, Wilhelm von Mirbach.
On July 6, 1918, Yakov Blyumkin and Nikolai Andreev infiltrated the diplomatic mission as officers of the political police of Soviet Russia. They shot the ambassador as a sign of disagreement with the peace treaty between Moscow and Berlin, signed in Brest Litovsk (today the city of Brest in Belarus) on March 3 of the same year.
Under the agreement, Russia ceded to Germany territories from today’s Estonia in the north to the Crimean Peninsula in the south.
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