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August 5, 2004 Edition

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Warsaw Uprising:
Sixtieth anniversary of heroism and betrayal

photo of George Weigel
The Catholic 
Difference 

George Weigel 

Last month, in Poland, a friend said that his 75-year old mother "always cries in August." Why? Because August makes her remember the Warsaw Uprising, which took place exactly 60 years ago.

Poland was Great Britain's "First Ally" in the war against Nazi Germany. Dismembered by the Nazis and Stalin's backstabbing Soviet regime in September 1939, "Poland" once again disappeared from the map of Europe, as it had from 1795 to 1918. But Poland fought on.

Poland's heroes

The Polish government never formally surrendered, after resisting the German onslaught far longer than the French managed in June 1940.

Polish intelligence gave Britain Germany's supposedly unbreakable "Enigma" coding machine, probably the greatest intelligence coup of the war. Polish pilots flew with the Royal Air Force and helped save England during the Battle of Britain.

The 1st Polish Armored Division led the Allied breakout from the Falaise Pocket in Normandy, making it possible for LeClerc's Free French to liberate Paris and Patton's U.S. Third Army to roar across France toward the Reich. General Wladyslaw Anders' Polish II Corps won the decisive Battle of Monte Cassino, clearing the way for the Allied liberation of Rome.

As Pope John Paul II said in Warsaw in 1979, "We cannot forget the heroism of the Polish soldier who fought on all the world's fronts 'for our freedom and yours.' We [remember] with respect and gratitude . . . all those who extended us their assistance. And we think with bitterness on all those occasions when we were let down."

The Warsaw Uprising

The Warsaw Uprising -- 63 days of epic heroism, Christian self-sacrifice, brutality, and suffering between Aug. 1 and Oct. 2, 1944 -- was one of those occasions.

When the underground Polish Home Army rose up against the German Occupation on Aug. 1, the Red Army of Marshall Konstantin Rokossovsky was just across the Vistula River, in the Warsaw suburb of Praga.

It did virtually nothing for the next two months to help the Poles; "Uncle Joe" Stalin evidently preferred to have the Nazis finish off fighting Poland for him, so that he could help himself to the country after the war.

Crushed between

Indeed, the Soviets were far worse than passive: while the SS and the Gestapo were shooting Varsovians by the tens of thousands in Warsaw, the NKVD, predecessor to the KGB, was executing Poles in Praga, lest they turn out to be anti-communists.

Warsaw was not crushed by one totalitarian power while another looked on; Warsaw was crushed between the two worst regimes in human history.

British, U.S. stand by

Great Britain and America stood by while Warsaw suffered the equivalent in civilian casualties of one 9/11 every day for two months. There were a few supply drops from the RAF and the U.S. Army Air Force -- most of the latter ended up in German hands.

There was no serious Anglo-American political pressure on Stalin to do his duty by the Grand Alliance's Polish ally. The Polish Parachute Brigade, stationed in England, was not sent to Warsaw.

The aftermath was Carthaginian: Home Army veterans escaping through the city's sewers, chest-deep in sludge; prisoners, the sick, and the elderly murdered by the Nazis; the city razed.

Shame of betrayal

Under the rubble lay the great cross that stood outside the Church of the Holy Cross on Krakowskie Przedmiescie, Warsaw's Pennsylvania Ave. Thanks to its faith in the truth embodied in the Cross, Poland would rise again -- and give a new birth of freedom to east central Europe.

But on this 60th anniversary, we should remember that Warsaw was betrayed by Britain and the United States in 1944, for crude Realpolitik reasons. My Polish friend's mother will cry this month from memory; Britons and Americans should cry from shame.


George Weigel is a senior fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C.


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