THE GERMANS WANT TO TEAR UP RUSSIA! Scandalous pre election boards appeared: THE AREA OF KALININGRAD AS A PART OF A POWERFUL EU MEMBER, everybody is waiting for Putin’s reaction!
IZVOR: Republika - 01.09.2021 | 10:52
Controversial pre election posters appeared all around the country, within a ruling party CDU campaign, whose members also include the chancellor, Angela Merkel.
Foto: Tanjug/AP
The first diplomatic scandal threats to ‘explode’ on the relation Berlin-Moscow after posters appeared in the state of Mecklenburg - West Pomerania showing the whole Russian area of Kaliningrad being detached from its mother country and incorporated into the territory of the most powerful member of European Union.
To make the scandal even bigger, those are pre election posters which have been used within the campaign of the ruling Christian-Democratic Union (CDU) and its sister party Christian-Social Union (CSU).
This is the reason why media speculate that Kremlin too might make an announcement, since the national parliamentary elections in Germany are scheduled for the end of September, so it is not quite clear why such a move has happened.
Additionally, with purpose of obvious provocation, copies of pre election posters from 1949 were used along with the map of Germany with pre war borders including Kaliningrad area.
- The posters are 72 years old and they show the pre war map of Germany with the picture of Estern Prussia and a part of today’s territory of Poland- a local newspapers ‘Nordkurier’ state, and it has been reported by Sputnik.
The first one to make an announcement after the scandal was the spokesman for CDU, Hans Dettmann, who stated that his party had nothing to do with placing the posters.
- Such campaign is confusing and it needs to be removed-he highlighted.
Let’s remind that the modern Kaliningrad area is situated on the territory of the ex German province, Eastern Prussia. After the Second World War, according to the decisions of the Postdam Conference of the countries of the Anti Hitler Coalition, most of East Prussia became a part of Poland, and a third of the territory with its capital Königsberg (today’s Kaliningrad) became a part of the Soviet Union, and later Russia.