As far as Polish society though, we've endured far too much throughout our entire history with Russia to not be russophobes. We're always going to be cautious.
Which is totally understandable, of course. Being cautious is fine. Paranoid is not ;)
the collapsing economy caused by Putin invading their main industrial region...
Jon, the previous (pre-Maidan) governement was corrupt, and that was one of the official reasons for the "revolution". Today's government is at least as corrupt, if not more. Is that Putin's fault too?
You must have seen that
Panama Papers story. Mr. Poroshenko is on the list of the current world leaders involved in tax evasion.
Is that what Ukrainians really wanted?
You realise we're only at the start of this one? Maybe not...
So? The USSR has collapsed. Poland has changed. It's part of both the EU and NATO now. And as far as I know, the relations (in terms of diplomacy and economics) between Poland and Russia have been good since then. That's what I'm trying to say. There is no reason, in my opinion, to expect any aggression of Poland from Russia. Poland has no significant Russian minority, it has no oil and gas reserves... Russia could not justify such an aggression and would lose most of its allies.
Found in 1.5 seconds on google
Sources? Google is not a valid source, Jon.
Would any country be anything other than very wary indeed about a has-been and would-be superpower who has just invaded and is currently at war with their neighbour and close ally?
As I wrote above, being wary is okay, but being paranoid is not. Because that's when you do the biggest mistakes.
Bizarre and sad to see Putinist apologetics here.
You can repeat that as many times as you want, but it won't make it more accurate.
I'm not a "Putinist apologetics", I just try to have a more distant look on events, which you have a hard time doing, obviously.
Your vision of the Ukraine crisis seems quite simplistic. We're the good guys. Everything is the Russians' fault.
Anyone who isn't anti-Russian isn't a Polish. Its as simple as that.
Yeah, there's nothing better than a common enemy to create a strong sense of identity. It doesn't have to be rational. It rarely is actually.