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Chapter 201: Polish Peace Talks


"Nikolai really suggested that I meet with Jaruzelski" Lech Walesa looked at C, who had come to Poland from the United States with a fake passport and risked being arrested by the Polish secret police, and felt a little moved in his heart, but V actually made him compromise with his enemy, the government he had opposed all his life.

Walesa couldn't stand it anyway.

"Comrade Lech, Nikolai asked me to convey to you that politics is the art of compromise.

We can compromise with everyone at the right time, as long as we get what we want.

Comrade Lech, please seriously consider that the nationwide strike we are calling for has been going on for more than half a year, and during this period Jaruzelsky has sent people to contact us several times for talks, so it makes sense that you should go.

Yuri said bitterly.

Lech Walesa was a little strange that Yuri was so zealous in this matter, but when he thought about the help of Solidarity behind Yuri, Nikolai was simply generous.

Although Nikolai is a mysterious rich man, he has been supporting the activities of Solidarity as early as when Solidarity was suppressed by the Polish government and fell into a low ebb.

For Walesa, Nikolai was Solidarity's most reliable friend, and he reached out to Solidarity at its most dangerous, rather than being utilitarian and purposeful in all its kind of assistance, as the church and Americans do.

Lech Walesa is still able to distinguish this.

The reason why Yuri had to travel thousands of miles and risk to go to Poland to meet Walesa in person was to allow Walesa to reach a settlement with the Polish government as soon as possible and put an end to this endless strike.

The strike cost the Gorky Brotherhood a lot of resources, and now it's time to harvest.

As soon as Solidarity came to power, it would be possible to use the power of Walesa to annex Polish state-owned enterprises by Gorky companies.

This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

Several meetings have been held within the Gorky system for this purpose, with MSC looking at the Port of Gdansk to acquire the exclusive rights to operate the Baltic Sea's natural port, and Glencore taking a fancy to Poland's rich non-ferrous metal resources.

Now with the development of the information industry in the United States, the consumption of non-ferrous metals such as copper, aluminum, lead, zinc, silver, nickel, cobalt is increasing, and Glencore hopes to acquire some high-quality non-ferrous metal deposits in Europe to meet the needs of the European market.

In addition, Eva's communications industry, Karim's agriculture, Mikhail's finance and insurance industries are all looking forward to entering this virgin land that has not been cultivated by capital, which is the doorstep of the Soviet Union, and as long as the Soviet Union collapses in the future, Seryosha's Gorky enterprises can penetrate into the three Baltic states, Belarus, Ukraine, Czechoslovakia, and Lithuania with the independence of many Soviet republics, these countries are facing a serious shortage of market supply, and it is not difficult to control their economic lifeline.

And when the time comes, these countries will generally fall into a fiscal crisis, and this is the best time for Seryosha to sit on the ground and raise prices.

Walesa was only an electrician at the Gdansk shipyard before he became the leader of Solidarity.

He could not see such far-reaching political problems, which was very different from Seryosha, a politician who participated in the economic operation of the Soviet state and had extensive management experience.

Seryosha had long seen that Jaruzelski was afraid that the Soviet Union would once again send troops to interfere in Poland's internal affairs, and if he could not reach a rapprochement with Solidarity as soon as possible and resolve the domestic crisis, once the Soviet army forcibly took over the Polish government and turned the Polish United Workers' Party into a party branch of the CPSU.

Then Poland will be completely annexed by the Soviet Union, which no Polish is willing to accept, and Jaruzelski will become a sinner of history.

After Walesa accepted Yuri's suggestion, Yuri did not leave Poland, he was going to lead the negotiations between Walesa and Jaruzelski here, fight for it when it is time to fight for it, and give up when it is time to give up.

Everything is premised on the legal status of Solidarity being resolved as soon as possible and Walesa's entry into the leadership of Poland.

During this period, the affairs of Georgia were just holding back the hands of Gorbachev and the radicals in the Soviet Union, who did not have the time to take care of Polish affairs, and once they missed this opportunity, the result would be difficult to say.

A few days later, Yuri, on behalf of Walesa, spoke constructively with the Polish government in the name of the spokesman of the Solidarity Guild, before Walesa and Jaruzelski spoke.

It is necessary to first confirm the topic of this conversation, the respective needs of both sides, etc., which is exactly what the rabble in Georgia lacks, if a negotiation has no theme, it is impossible to achieve any result except for wasting time, many street politicians do not understand this, the topic of the negotiation cannot be too detached from reality, and the proposition cannot be too harsh, otherwise, the Polish United Workers' Party will not waste time negotiating at all, and it is good to solve the problem directly with tanks.

At Seryosha's suggestion, Yuri personally persuaded Walesa to temporarily abandon some of his whimsical political ideas and unrealistic political demands, and Solidarity's political demands began to become practical, which made Jaruzelsky think highly of Walesa's team.

After the preliminary communication between the two sides achieved certain results, Walesa finally publicly stated that he would meet with Jaruzelski at the Polish Prime Minister's Office, and the two sides would start negotiations on the political status of Solidarity, the political demands of the striking workers, and the political reform of Poland.

As soon as this news was announced, it caught the world off guard.

The first to come out and welcome the Vatican was the Holy See, who expressed his pleasure to hear the news of peace talks between the Polish Government and Solidarity as a manifestation of Poland's political progress.

However, the Walesa-Jaruzelski talks actually had a greater impact on these satellite states of the Soviet Union, and many countries were stimulated by the border negotiations between Hungary and Austria bypassing the Soviet Union a few months ago, and are still waiting for the reaction of Big Brother t1706231537: