Talk:Leopold Okulicki

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Hi,

Just doing some research on the polish resistance movement from WWII to present day and I do not agree with the statement that the AK dissolved. In fact it appears that it was part of a reorganization. The first thing to occur was for it to shed "non officers". About 2500 officers were retained as part of the AK coordinating with the London Government. These operatives allied with the AngloAmerican alignment, at the outset of the Cold war. Upon the death of Stalin in 1953, former AK and AK associated individuals emerged via the "foreign clandestine cultural war front" that was organized by Western intelligence to sow the seeds of war based on culture instead of militancy, to steel the minds of the youth, and infect foreign intellectuals with anti stalinist ideals that would destabilize central party communist rule. In 1956 the first major revolution occurred one of Titoist socialist nationalism (Association of Home Army Soldiers (1956-65), with the emergence of Gomulka- a former AK associated person. The reorganization of the policy security system was IN FACT largely influenced by AK veterans who newly won their freedom and amnesty in 1956 - much of the top leadership was given jail time in 1949 for as much as 10 year terms, some were killed, some got less time but political organization was stifled by assassinations and arrests, some of this by the AK, others by the NKVD, an their leadership was in fact by Moczar, who until sidelined was effectively head of the AK in its new form of the Polish security police. By 1968 the second wave had hit - this is the intellectual rebellion of polish catholic nationalism., It was in fact sponsoring of "intellectuals by foreign intelligence fronts such s the CCF and its organs - at the same time the effect of the Antisemetic activities suppressed the children of the elites --- which forment revolt of the previous paradigm, Around 1980 the third wave hit, fueled by the children of the elite who were also spurred by former AK-ZWM operatives such as Tadeusz Kowalik, that influenced the solidarity movement, fueled by AK sentimentalism - membership, advice and support, that would lead to the destruction of soviet rule in Poland in 1989 which opened up non centralized labour - and ownership of labour by foreign interests. This led to the western banking institutions taking over polands future capital return on labour. The AK resurfaced as a militant organization as soviet military overlordship was thrown off, in this movement the militia movement by groups such as Strzelec, one of over 16 such organizations which even today are coordinating to insure the independence of poland, in the more resent Russian movements into Eastern Europe. The AK was no dissolved its membership which continued working for the Anglo-American side, and polish self empowerment, continued to work towards the goal of polish nationalism, and that battle is still ongoing even with the most recent attempt to bring the Militias into close coordination with NATO and EU defense policies under unified command, something that hasn't happened since the Warsaw Uprising in 1944. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.97.45.104 (talk) 09:04, 13 February 2015 (UTC)

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