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Chapter 892 Polish Cannon Fodder

It is easy to come up with the strategy of using the Katyn Forest Incident to incite the Poles to fight against the Soviet Union, but it is not easy to implement it.

Because Germany's ambition for Poland is also well known to everyone. Although it is only a communist at present, the prospect of Poland becoming a part of Germany and the prospect of Poles becoming Germans is very clear.

And the Poles were roughly divided into two opinions on this inevitable future of destruction.

One is opposition, which is the mainstream opinion, or the mainstream opinion among Polish intellectuals. Their Polish national consciousness is extremely stubborn and they are determined to get the country out of Germany's control and restore independence.

One is to cater to, which is a non-mainstream view. Most of the people who hold this view are former Polish Bolsheviks with relatively weak national consciousness, or the Poles on the east bank of the Bug River, which was "educated" by the Soviets and had suffered the pain of losing their souls, and only then did they realize that losing freedom is nothing.

In the army composed of Poles today, it is divided into two categories according to the opinions of "opposition" and "cameron".

Polish soldiers who opposed fusion and German views formed the Polish Royal Guard Army, which was loyal to the Polish king, was the German Emperor William III. Most of the Poles who catered to the German views joined the Polish Volunteer Division of the SS.

The former is the army of the Kingdom of Poland, and although the latter is called the SS, it is an integral part of the German Wehrmacht. The SS in this time and space is just a name, meaning that the initial participants were all partisans of the German National Socialist Workers' Party.

However, by now, the boundary between the SS and the National Defense Forces has been very blurred. Many of the SS officers and soldiers are non-Nazi members, and there are also Nazi officers and soldiers within the National Defense Forces.

By the way, the principle of non-party in the German Constitution is only applicable to professional soldiers, and it is not applicable to recruited conscripts and reserve officers who are demobilized after fighting. Otherwise, they can escape military service by joining a party, which is too vague.

Guderian now wants to use it to attack the Soviet Red Army, of course, the Polish Royal Family Defense Army, rather than the already pro-German SS Polish volunteers, because most of them are already fighting for Germany on the front line.

If the Polish Royal Guard Army fights desperately with the Soviet Union, it is not possible to rely solely on the Katyn Forest Incident. The Katyn Forest Incident can be used to incite Polish civilians, but it has little effect on those big figures who can truly influence the middle and high-level officials of the Defense Army.

On May 19, on the third day after meeting Kennedy, Hessman, who had been in Berlin and Toxson for these days, temporarily handed over the work to the First Military Control Commissioner Guderian. He arrived at Krakow, the capital of the Little Polish province belonging to the Kingdom of Poland, accompanied by Natalie Lesinskaya, the ambassador of the Kingdom of Poland to Switzerland and ambassador to Geneva.

Since Warsaw is currently occupied by the Soviet army and is the capital of the People's Republic of Poland, the government of the Kingdom of Poland could only move to Krakow, the second largest city in Poland.

However, the purpose of Hesman to Krakow was not to meet with the leaders of the Polish government, but to meet with Marshal Edward Rezhmigvi, the commander-in-chief of the Polish armed forces who lived in seclusion here, and Wadislaw Sikorsky, the former Polish exile leader who was under house arrest in Krakow after surrendering from the British mainland.

The meeting was in a very beautiful manor outside Krakow. This is Natalie Lesinskaya's villa in Krakow. It originally belonged to a duke of Austro-Hungarian Empire, but in the Polish Republic, it belonged to a confidant of Pisusky. Now I don't know why I belong to Natalie

In a luxurious living room that can serve as a king's audition hall, Hessman drank the Mantenin coffee brewed by Natalie himself from Indonesia, one of the most expensive coffees on the European market, while looking at the two guests who had just visited Rezhmigvi and Sikorsky.

Rezhmigvi looked a little sluggish and did not wear military uniforms, but a well-made casual suit. After the Polish army was defeated by the Soviet Union in 1939, he has been living in seclusion, as if he is invincible. However, in the Polish defensive army today, his influence still exists.

Sikorsky, who was under house arrest, was wearing a Polish military uniform and the Republican team. She sat there in a straight posture and looked like a senior general. Like Rezhmigvi, he was also very influential in the Polish defense army.

In fact, he is a symbol of the Polish spirit of resistance!

While Hessman was tasting coffee, Natalie was talking to two Polish generals in German. Rezhmigvi and Sikorsky were both from Austro-Hungary and could speak fluent German. The conversation between the three was not about the Polish defense forces going out to fight, but was related to the future of the Polish kingdom.

Rezhmigvie and Sikorsky had no objection to Poland's joining the European Community, otherwise what else could it be? Will it be a European orphan after learning from Serbia? And both of them were willing to recognize the system of the German emperor as the King of Poland.

But they all oppose further on the basis of the Gongjun Alliance!

Natalie tried her best to convince the two of them. When it came to Hessman, he had no effect after drinking a cup of coffee.

Hessman gently placed the coffee cup in his hand on the coffee table in front of him, and then interrupted the conversation between the three.

"Natalie, the coffee is good, go get me another cup."

"Okay." Natalie immediately stopped the conversation, picked up Hessman's coffee cup, then nodded apologetically at the two Polish generals, and trotted all the way.

"It's hard for this woman to become a qualified politician," Hessman looked at Natalie's slim back and said with a smile. "She should find a man to marry, and then have a bunch of children is the future of a country and a nation."

"Marshal of the Empire, what do you mean" Rezhmigvi knew that Hessman had a deep meaning, but he couldn't understand.

"I mean," Hessman looked at Rezhmigvi seriously, "It doesn't matter whether the Kingdom of Poland becomes an integral part of the German Empire, what matters is the children of Poland! If all Polish women are like Natalie, then even if Poland is completely independent now, there will be no future.

On the contrary, if every Polish woman was like my wife, Chloe, then the Poles would enjoy a large part of the German Empire in the future.”

"That must be afforded," Rezchmigvi laughed, "How can an ordinary Polish woman compare to the Marquis de Heinsberg?"

"It's hard to say," Hessman shook his head. "There are quite a few children in the farmer's family than my family." He smiled. "From a macro perspective, the population of a nation actually depends on the so-called living space. Of course, it refers to land suitable for human survival and reproduction. The more land, the more population it will have. If a nation loses part of its living space, then in the long run, their population will inevitably decrease."

This theory may not be accurate, but both Polish generals agree that more territory is definitely easier to support people than less territory. Only by raising more people can one live, and more people will be more powerful!

Hessman smiled and continued: "The future of Poland depends on the population of the Polish people, and the population of the Polish people depends on the living space of the Polish people. How much living space can the Polish people obtain in the German Empire depends on whether you are willing to cooperate, and whether the Poles are willing to avenge their compatriots who died tragically in the forest of Katyn."

Rezhmigvi and Sikorsky glanced at each other, how could they not understand what Hessman meant?

Hessmann immediately seized the key land of the Polish issue!

Poland's escape from the independence of the German Empire, or something, seems to be a daydream. Now is the time when the German Empire is at its peak, how can it make Poland independent?

Therefore, it is useless for the Poles to compete for independence. Only by cooperating with the Germans and sharing more land can we support our children. Only with enough children can we have a future!

Even Sikorsky understood this, otherwise he would not have been able to escape when he fell in Krakow in the UK.

After a moment of silence, Sikorsky asked: "How much land can Poland get in the future?"

"It depends on the performance of the Polish army on the battlefield," Hessman said lightly, "Since both the Treaty of Versailles and the Treaty of Saint-Germain have been abolished, the current Kingdom of Poland inherits the legal system of the Polish Conference Kingdom!"

The Kingdom of Poland is Russian Poland. This country was established in 1815 through the Vienna Conference, with an area of ​​only 12.85 million square kilometers. If the Kingdom of Poland only has this little land, how many people will the Polish nation have in the future? If there is no people, will Poland have a future?

Hessman looked at Sikorsky, "General Sikorsky, go and be loyal to the emperor, and then I will recommend you to be the commander of the Polish Army. I think it is most appropriate for you to take on this position. Moreover, the Katyn Forest Incident can also become an opportunity for us to fully reconcile and unite because the Soviet Union was going to fundamentally eliminate the Polish nation."
Chapter completed!
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