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Entrance to Auschwitz, one of the Nazis' camps in Poland
Photo: AFP

Poland says still waiting for US to apologize for Holocaust remarks

FBI director says he 'didn't say Poland was responsible for the Holocaust' after his statements last week prompted outcry in eastern European country and drew wide condemnation.

Poland was still waiting for the United States to apologize for remarks by an FBI official that it says implied complicity in the Holocaust during World War Two, a government spokeswoman said on Thursday.

 

 

FBI director James Comey's remarks, published in the Washington Post last week, prompted an outcry in Poland and drew condemnation in the media and from politicians.

 

Poland is one of the United States' closest European allies, a relationship strengthened by the conflict in Ukraine and related tensions with Russia. Polish politicians have repeatedly called for an increased US military presence in the region.

 

FBI Director James B. Comey with Obama (Photo: AFP) (Photo: AFP)
FBI Director James B. Comey with Obama (Photo: AFP)

 

Comey's article said: "In their minds, the murderers and accomplices of Germany, and Poland, and Hungary, and so many, many other places didn’t do something evil. They convinced themselves it was the right thing to do, the thing they had to do."

 

Poland says the passage wrongly implied it was complicit in the Nazi genocide of European Jews.

 

On Thursday, government spokeswoman, Malgorzata Kidawa-Blonska, told private broadcaster TVN24: "We expect the word 'apology' from the U.S. side."

 

The US State Department spokeswoman said on Monday that Comey did not intend to suggest in an article last week that Poland was responsible for the Holocaust during World War Two.

 

Asked by ABC-affiliated broadcaster, Wate 6, on Tuesday whether he had an apology for Poland, Comey said: "I don’t. Except I didn’t say Poland was responsible for the Holocaust. In a way I wish very much that I hadn’t mentioned any countries because it’s distracted some folks from my point.”

 

“I worry a little bit in some countries that point has gotten lost. There is no doubt that people in Poland heroically resisted the Nazis, and some people heroically protected the Jews, but there’s also no doubt that in every country occupied by the Nazis, there were people collaborating with the Nazis.”

 

Poland's deputy foreign minister Rafal Trzaskowski told public broadcaster TVP Info on Thursday: "The FBI director is trying to back out from what he said, but he didn't have the courage to apologize."

 


פרסום ראשון: 04.23.15, 12:34
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