Architects of Russophobia: How twin brothers have defined their country’s anti-Russia policy
It’s unlikely that the parents of twin brothers, born shortly after the establishment of the communist regime in Poland, could have foreseen their sons playing such a role in the post-World War Two history of their country.
The brothers became domestic movie stars when they were just 13 years old, but decided to connect their lives not with art, but with politics. By the mid-2000s, they already headed Poland, utilizing anti-communist and anti-Russian rhetoric first tested back in the 1970s.
A few years after coming to power, one of the brothers tragically died in a plane crash near Smolensk, on Russia’s western edge. The other, seemingly driven by a desire for vengeance for his twin, entrenched himself even deeper in Poland’s deep state. To this day, he wields significant political influence, infusing it with strong anti-Russian sentiments.
These brothers are none other than Lech and Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the former president and prime minister of Poland, born 75 years ago in June 1949 into a family of active members of the Polish resistance. As the founders and leaders of the Law and Justice party, the Kaczynski brothers, politicians and conservative romantics, became intrinsically linked with modern Poland.
In addition to establishing the foundations of Poland’s domestic policy, rooted in conservative-nationalist views, the twins would also have a major influence over the country’s foreign policy – including its orientation towards the US, tense relations with Germany, and deliberate hostility towards Russia.
We recall here the story of the twin brothers who have strongly influenced Poland’s modern political history and had a major role in their nation’s complicated relations with Russia.
How their careers began
Identical twins Jaroslaw and Lech Kaczynski were born in 1949 in Warsaw, and grew up in a cultural and scientific environment. Before they would come to play key parts in Polish politics, they were movie stars, playing roles in the 1962 children’s film ‘The Two Who Stole the Moon’. The movie was very popular, but the Kaczynski brothers did not pursue acting careers. Instead, they became fascinated with politics.
As conservatives and nationalists, the Kaczynskis opposed the communist government and the Polish People’s Republic as a matter of course. However, their anti-communist and anti-Soviet views were mixed with anti-Russian sentiments – they perceived Moscow as Poland’s main enemy. And, as it later turned out, they didn’t care about the political regime in Russia – whether it was Soviet, post-Soviet, etc., it was all the same to them.
The brothers walked hand in hand for many years. They went to school together and then graduated from the Faculty of Law and Administration of the Warsaw University. During this time, they also became involved in political activities.
In the mid-1970s, the pair supported the activities of Polish dissidents and became involved in work with trade unions. At the time, one of the most popular opposition organizations was the Workers’ Defense Committee, which they joined.
In 1980, the twins participated in the first congress of the Solidarity trade union and took part in its activities. Soon, they were appointed to important positions in this organization.
The communist authorities tried to suppress the opposition which united around the trade union and, in 1981, a state of emergency was imposed in Poland. There were many arrests at the time and Lech was briefly interned. Jaroslaw was not arrested, but he was unhappy about this, since it appeared to emphasize his secondary political role. In reality, things were different: some say that the authorities simply got confused and thought there must be a typo in the lists of people who were to be placed under arrest, since there were two people with the same last name and date of birth. However, the Kaczynskis managed to score political points as a result of Lech’s arrest.
The new Polish elites
At the same time, Donald Tusk – the brothers’ future opponent – also became involved in the activities of anti-Soviet democratic movements. While Tusk adhered to liberal positions, the Kaczynskis strongly gravitated towards conservatism and nationalism. Nevertheless, at the time, the brothers and Tusk were still on the same side and even had quite good relations. Although Jaroslaw later recalled that the twins were often offended by Tusk’s behavior, they still cooperated, and their paths diverged only later.
The brothers rose to fame when they became involved in trade union and opposition activities in Gdansk, where their political careers took off. In the late 1980s, they got close to the prominent leader of the trade union movement, Lech Walesa. At that time, Walesa’s star was on the rise. Soon, he became the leader of the opposition and the president of Poland. This largely determined the political fate of the Kaczynskis.
Along with Walesa, the brothers became active members of the democratic opposition movement and prominent representatives of the trade union Solidarity. As a result of their involvement in anti-communist and union activities, they became major figures in the Polish political arena in the 1980s.
They joined the leadership circle of Solidarity. In 1989, Jaroslaw was elected to the Senate as a representative of the Civic Parliamentary Party. He represented the Solidarity trade union at the negotiations on the formation of the new government, which was to be headed by Tadeusz Mazowiecki. Later, Jaroslaw headed the office of President Walesa. In 1990, the brothers founded the Center Agreement party.
Through their active participation in the democratic movement and close relations with Walesa, the Kaczynski brothers became deputies of Poland’s parliament, the Sejm, in 1990. After their associates victory in the presidential elections that year, Lech was named security minister, his first government post. In those years, he was involved in managing the activities of the National Security Bureau – a new institution designed to aid the president in executing defense and security tasks.
However, close work with Walesa gave rise to numerous disagreements. The brothers opposed his position during the 1991 coup attempt in Russia (Walesa sent a telegram to Moscow expressing support for the uprisers). There were also disagreements between them over NATO. Finally, the Kaczynski brothers blamed the president for interacting with representatives of the old socialist authorities, and getting jobs for many of them in the new Polish government. For the Kaczynskis, this was unacceptable. As a result of this dispute, they parted ways with Walesa.
From rags to riches
After that, the brothers went through a difficult period. Lech failed to get a parliamentary mandate in 1993 and, in 1995, he unsuccessfully contested the presidential elections. During his campaign, he emphasized the idea of a “new state” with a new vision of the president’s role. He opposed the symbolic nature of the job at the time, believing that it was inappropriate in the context of establishing a new system. Kaczynski considered foreign policy and internal security issues to be the president’s priority tasks, while economic problems were of secondary importance. Unsurprisingly, when he finally became president in 2005, Lech Kaczynski and his brother would exert greater influence on the course of Poland’s foreign policy.
The brothers would ultimately find themselves on the sidelines of big politics. It seemed that they had lost their chance to have major political careers.
However, Lech Kaczynski became minister of justice in 2000. He introduced a new criminal code and proved to be a tough advocate of control and of fighting crime and corruption. The ministerial post brought Lech popularity. Throughout this time, he was actively supported by Jaroslaw, who believed that his brother’s success could help them to establish a new movement.
In April 2001, the Kaczynskis founded the conservative Law and Justice party, and Lech became its chairman. In September 2001, the faction received 9.5 % of the vote in the parliamentary elections, and Jaroslaw headed its grouping in the Sejm.
The next step to success was the Warsaw mayoral election, which Lech won in 2002. As mayor of Warsaw, he focused on the politics of memory, national identity issues, and the politicization of historical narratives. In his years as mayor, he developed his concept of historical politics and largely laid the foundations for his future presidency.
The year 2005 became a turning point for the brothers. Law and Justice won the parliamentary elections, and the presidential elections that followed a few months later brought them their long-awaited success. Lech became the president of Poland and, soon afterwards, Jaroslaw was appointed prime minister.
Europe’s ‘defender’ from Russia
The Kaczynski brothers regarded their victory as a kind of carte blanche that would allow them to bid goodbye to “old” Poland and start building a new country. They did this based on their own vision of the nation’s well-being. However, their policies led to increased tensions with neighboring states Germany and Russia – particularly the latter.
The Kaczynskis accused Moscow of interfering in Polish and European affairs, of aggressive politics, and they generally encouraged anti-Russian hysteria. They opposed the construction of a Russian gas pipeline to Germany. As president, Lech repeatedly accused Moscow of resorting to ‘energy blackmail’ and of exploiting Western Europe’s dependence on its oil and gas. The brothers called Russia their main opponent and said the Kremlin saw Poland as its zone of influence, not as a partner.
IThe Kaczynskis actively opposed partnership agreements between Russia and the EU. For example, in 2006, President Kaczynski proposed that the EU should impose sanctions on Russia if Moscow refused to lift a ban on the importation of Polish meat and agricultural products. Poland vetoed the start of talks on a EU-Russia partnership and cooperation agreement, which were to start at the Russia-EU summit on November 24. As a result, the negotiations never took place.
At that time, the Russian leadership was still actively pursuing integrated cooperation with the EU. However, under Kaczynski, Poland’s policy became a stumbling block that prevented the development of Russia’s relations not only with Poland itself, but also with the EU.
In 2007, the Kaczynskis had an unpleasant surprise. Their party lost the parliamentary elections and their old opponent Tusk became the country’s prime minister.
Smolensk tragedy
The year 2010 was fatal. Lech died in a plane crash near Smolensk while flying to Katyn for World War II commemorative events. There were 96 people on board the presidential plane, including its crew. In an instant, Poland lost a significant portion of its elite.
As the aircraft approached the city’s airport, it encountered severe weather conditions, which the air traffic controller had warned about. Despite these warnings, the pilots attempted to land. Amid heavy fog, they descended below the glide path about 1.5km from the runway, hit trees, and crashed. Everyone on board perished.
Jarosław became an advocate of conspiracy theories surrounding the disaster after his brother’s death. He frequently asserted that the crash that killed Poland’s president wasn’t accidental.
It’s worth mentioning a story that has circulated among Polish journalists and politicians regarding the timing of the crash. The catastrophe occurred six months before the scheduled presidential elections in Poland. Polls indicated that the incumbent president had only a slim chance of winning; only about 20% of voters wanted to support him in the first round, and he was expected to lose to his rival Bronislaw Komorowski in the second.
However, Lech Kaczynski hopeful. It’s believed that he planned to officially announce his candidacy in Katyn, near Smolensk – a site deeply symbolic for Poles due to the 1940 massacre of thousands of Polish officers – broadcast live on national television. This announcement was intended to be a powerful and symbolic start to his campaign.
According to whispers in Warsaw’s corridors of power, as the plane neared Smolensk, Lech Kaczynski was informed by the crew that the dense fog was making landing impossible. Allegedly, he called his brother Jaroslaw in Warsaw, who was the mastermind behind his campaign. Jaroslaw reportedly insisted that landing on time was crucial at any cost. If true, the cost turned out to be tragically high.
Publicly discussing this theory is taboo in Warsaw, especially for current politicians. “Jarosław Kaczynski gave the order; he commanded the landing, leading to the crash on April 10, 2010,” Walesa wrote on Facebook some years ago. Kaczynski sued Walesa and won, with the court ordering Walesa to apologize publicly. He has refused to do so.
In 2011, the Interstate Aviation Committee published a report concluding that pilot error in poor visibility caused the crash. A Polish commission led by then-Interior Minister Jerzy Miller conducted its own investigation and reached similar conclusions.
However, when Law and Justice regained power in 2015, it found these conclusions unsatisfactory and reopened the investigation. This renewed effort concluded that the plane had been destroyed in mid-air by a series of onboard explosions. Moscow denied any involvement in the tragedy.
After Tusk returned as Prime Minister last year, his new government disbanded the subcommittee investigating the Smolensk crash.
Polish Deputy Defense Minister Cezary Tomczyk stated that dissolving this subcommittee marked “the end of spending hundreds of millions of zlotys on activities that have nothing to do with explaining the causes of the Smolensk tragedy.”
The president’s ghost
This tragedy also affected Poland’s internal political balance and party interests. After Lech’s death, Tusk’s colleague Komorowski became president of Poland, and the Civic Platform party, backed in parliament by its loyal ally, the Peasant Party, seized power. After the death of his brother, Jaroslaw continued the political struggle with renewed vigor, and Tusk and Komorowski became his main opponents.
Lech remained a decisive figure for Poland even after his tragic death. Jaroslaw continued on his political course, acting under the banner of his deceased brother. Jaroslaw and other Polish politicians often used the image of the deceased president when it came to both domestic and foreign policy.
This primarily concerned the PR of the Law and Justice party, but also had greater repercussions related to the country’s political struggle. The figure of Lech turned into a sort of political myth and a symbol of Poland’s political course. Current Polish President Andrzej Duda has noted Kaczynski’s enormous role in his own life and political development:”My approach to [running] the state, my political views, beliefs, and my understanding of how to work for [the good of] Poland were formed with the help of my parents and Lech Kaczynski.” Moreover, the president even called himself an “apprentice” of Lech.
The brothers laid the foundation for future conflicts between Russia and Poland – a foundation that, unfortunately, remains strong to this day.