British Civil Servant

Chapter 91: Hard and soft

O these Soviets! Alan Wilson shook his head in his heart. The world is inherently unequal, but such a heterogeneous country has to change this fate. In the eyes of Alan Wilson, it is simply crazy.

Let everyone unite under the banner of imperialism, turn all the third world countries into colonies, and enslave the people there forever. This should be what the imperialist powers should do.

But apparently there are two traitors of varying degrees in the now united imperialist camp. One clamoring for the liberation of the world and the other for national self-determination, both of which undoubtedly were enemies of the British Empire.

From the point of view, the Soviet Union should be the more urgent enemy, but considering that the European battlefield has just ended, the Soviet Union has suffered serious internal injuries, and the Soviet Union will not heal its internal injuries within ten years. Outside Eurasia, the current Soviet Union cannot do it.

On the contrary, the American allies who keep saying that the United Kingdom and the United States have special relations now really have the ability to pose a threat to the British overseas colonies, and the Americans are really doing it. This is what Alan Wilson really thinks. On the colonial issue, the United States is the most real enemy in the near future.

"Beautiful lady, if I were the Soviet Union, I should now give Britain a chance to breathe. The Soviets should understand that Britain has been damaged in this war, just like the Soviet Union." Alan Wilson, who has been silent for a long time, The real dark-box operation has finally begun.

Publicly blackmailing it is the job of the diplomats of Eiffel, not Alan Wilson. Alan Wilson has no good way but to use an honest attitude to let the Soviet Union understand the current situation.

"Britain has a vast colony!" Fortseva said in a sweet voice with a lethal smile on her face, "I thought the colonial empire of the past three hundred years would be very strong."

"But after all, the UK doesn't have a strong homeland, and we can't compare with the Soviet Union and the United States." Alan Wilson stared into Furtseva's eyes. On another occasion, this might be the beginning of a relationship, even if the other party is already thirty Five years old, but still very attractive and fatally attractive to men.

But not now. Alan Wilson's previous operation in Yugoslavia, although the cheapest one was the Soviet Union, was essentially for the sake of the British Empire, and wanted the United States to do more to fight the Soviet Union at the front. As a British, he only remained loyal to the British Empire, and never intended to serve the liberation of the world with the Cambridge Five.

Furtseva didn't refute either. After all, she is not a professional diplomat. The reason for her appearance here, like Alan Wilson, will not be noticed. So everything Ellen Wilson said, she was savoring it, judging its honesty.

When Alan Wilson mentioned the border issue between Poland and Germany, Fortseva retorted for the first time, "As early as five years ago, Britain had already expressed its understanding of the Soviet occupation of eastern Poland, and that was originally part of Imperial Russia. It's just that Because of the war, we had to give up temporarily, Mr. Allen, at this time, making a fuss about border changes, the British claim is untenable, the Curzon Line is named after Curzon, your foreign secretary of the British Empire, Don't you forget it so soon?"

How do I know? Alan Wilson was dissatisfied, why did Britain draw lines everywhere. As the commissioner of British India, he had never worked on the European side, so how could he know what was going on here.

Twenty-five years ago, when the Soviet-Russian Red Army repelled the Polish Intervention Army, Curzon, on behalf of the British government, suggested that Soviet Russia hold peace talks on this line as a ceasefire line. At the international conference held in Spa, both Poland and the Soviet Union recognized Curzon. The line was the Polish-Soviet border line. When the Polish army turned into a counteroffensive, the Polish government refused to recognize the Curzon Line.

"That idiot Pisutsky is not the one who supported the attack on Soviet Russia. But when it comes to the issue of Poland, we in the United Kingdom also mention the border line by the way. The real topic is that the Soviet Union must like it?" Alan Wilson directly put Poland and the The topic of territorial changes in Germany passed by, and additional conditions were put forward.

"Oh, is that so?" Furtseva's big eyes blinked, and she asked in a consultative tone, "An old-fashioned empire, I believe there are a lot of valuable things to share."

"Of course there is, of course there is!" Emphasizing it twice in a row, Alan Wilson stretched out his finger and boasted, "An absolute bonus for the Soviet Union, Miss Fortseva, there is now a Polish government-in-exile in London."

Fortseva's eyes lit up, of course she knew about it, although in the previous Poland-Greece transaction, the British side had sold Poland to the Soviet Union as a quid pro quo. But the existence of the Polish government in exile is always a hidden danger.

Alan Wilson, of course, also knew this~www.wuxiamtl.com~ After the Battle of Poland, the whole of Poland fell. The army that fled Poland swore allegiance to the Polish government in exile and participated in many wars. Polish soldiers on the former Polish border organized the Polish underground state against the German army on the former Polish border.

Poland was occupied by the Soviet Red Army after World War II. Because the Polish government in exile did not have much talks with the Polish Underground State and the Soviet Union, Poland established a government supported by the Soviet Union, and the Polish government in exile could not return to Poland.

The Polish government-in-exile persisted until the Soviet Union failed in the Cold War and finally returned to Poland. It is also because of the history of the Polish government-in-exile that Poland has always been an anti-Russian pioneer in Eastern Europe. It's just that, unlike World War II, people recognize the new father, the United States.

"The Polish government-in-exile has a strong influence on the Polish army abroad, and there are 150,000 former government troops loyal to Poland." Alan Wilson changed the situation when he said this, and then reminded Furtseva, "I heard that in a In a place called Katyn, the bodies of a large number of Polish officers were found, and who killed them, I will not comment."

"It was killed by the Germans and framed it for us." Furtseva frowned and retorted sternly.

"It doesn't matter who killed it, the key is whether anyone believes it. The Polish government in exile itself has strong anti-Russian ideology. If some of them use it to unite people's hearts, it will be a trouble." Alan Wilson is irrelevant Hanging high, he analyzed from the perspective of a third party, "With such a government in exile not under the control of the Soviet Union, Poland will not be stable, will it?"

"There are also hundreds of thousands of Polish soldiers who obeyed the Polish government in exile, as well as the hatred of the Soviet-Polish war, and three times the history of the partition of Poland. There are many, many, too many."

Furtseva frowned. Even if she hadn't heard of her loving father's attention to Poland, she could feel it.

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