Inside Story: Peace or ceasefire?

Mourners gather in Warsaw after the air crash that killed President Lech Kaczyns
Mourners gather in Warsaw after the air crash that killed President Lech Kaczynski and other senior officials in April, precipitating the current election campaign. Photo: Piotr Paw?owski/ Flickr
Mourners gather in Warsaw after the air crash that killed President Lech Kaczynski and other senior officials in April, precipitating the current election campaign. Photo: Piotr Paw?owski/ Flickr Is the thaw in relations between Poland and Russia sustainable? The Polish presidential election campaign and recent trends in Russian foreign policy highlight the key factors in play, writes John Besemeres. This sunday's second round of the Polish presidential election pits the current parliamentary speaker against a former prime minister in an unexpectedly tight race. Bronislaw Komorowski, the speaker and acting president, is a member of Premier Donald Tusk's governing Civic Platform party. His opponent is Jaroslaw Kaczynski, leader of the Law and Justice Party and the twin brother of the late president, Lech Kaczynski, who died in the air crash near Smolensk on 10 April. That accident also took the lives of many of Poland's political and military elite, who were on their way to commemorate the massacre of Polish officers by the Soviet secret police at Katyn in 1940. The crash not only precipitated this election but also seems to have contributed to Kaczynski's surprisingly strong showing in the first round. It has also reinforced a tentative thaw in relations between Poland and its largest neighbour, Russia, although the smooth course of the relationship is by no means certain. Both Komorowski and Kaczynski represent parties on the right of the political spectrum, but there the similarity ends. Law and Justice is populist, deeply clerical, militantly nationalist and socially very conservative ?
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