Waćkowski: The triumph of War Instigators in Slovenia

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Slovenia is simply a tiny country with many tourist advantages. After her separation from Yugoslavia in 1991, she took an unobvious political course. On the 1 hand, it joined the various collective structures of the West, and on the another hand it mostly retained its own industry.

Slovenia is practically a monoethnic country (except for a fewer municipalities in the north dominated by a Hungarian minority, there are practically no national minorities surviving in a short-range area). Due to the comparatively advanced standards of living, close Slavic brothers from the erstwhile Yugoslavia migrate to Slovenia. The country joined the European Union and NATO. Importantly, a referendum on Slovenia's membership of these organisations was held in 2003. The EU membership was 89.64%, while NATO membership was only 66.08%.

On the train with Kaczyński

The Slovenian political scene was dominated by a conglomerate of leftist, social-liberal parties and Slovenian Democratic Party. Social Liberal groups are committed to working with the EU. Slovenian Democratic organization is headed by 2 Prime Minister of Slovenia Janez Janša. This group is neoconservative about geopolitics and at the same time socially Trumpist. Janša was on a celebrated train to Kiev with instigators of war in 2022, including then Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki (former advisor to the current Prime Minister Donald Tusk), Jarosław Kaczyński and Prime Minister of the Czech Republic Petr Fiala (Fiala is now increasingly saying rational things in the face of the hazard of losing power.) The leader of the Slovenian Democratic organization has very good relations with the Prime Minister of Hungary Viktor Orbán.

A little Military Government

Parliamentary elections were held in Slovenia in April 2022. As a consequence of the elections, the authorities lost the Slovenian Democratic Party. fresh Prime Minister of Slovenia became Robert Golub from the Social Liberal Freedom Movement. The Freedom Movement formed a coalition with the Social Democrats and the Left. What is worth emphasizing, Left in its own program The election is opposed to the militarisation of Slovenia, has thesis on neutral abroad policy. The fresh government aimed at improving wellness services, improving public services, not serving Ukraine and filling the pockets of arms companies.

No rusophobia

The madness of war has swept Europe. War instigators from London and Washington are forcing expanding arms spending from NATO states (so that profits flow to their companies; sometimes German companies have any benefits). From large countries only the Prime Minister of Spain Pedro Sánchez Sometimes he tries to be assertive to instigators of war. Prime Minister Robert Golub He agreed in June 2025 at the NATO summit in The Hague to allocate 5% of GDP to arms. The coalitions showed assertiveness and only agreed to 3%. The Slovenian Prime Minister was initially frightened of opposition and ordered a referendum on Slovenia's membership of NATO due to a deficiency of support for specified a extremist increase in defence spending. Eventually, the thought of a referendum was rejected (the Left Members defended the thought of a referendum until the end). The Collective West and any Slovenian politicians were frightened due to the fact that the result of the referendum would be a large unknown. What is worth emphasising, in Slovenia, unlike our homeland, there is no rusophobic paranoia and even the politicians of the Slovenian Democratic organization are open about the request to increase defence spending.

Realism and Slovenian pragmatism

On the Slovenian political scene is the Slovenian National Party. The organization presently has about 3% of support in public opinion polls, which is simply a good forecast for the parliamentary elections to be held next spring (election threshold in Slovenia is 4%). This group straight has in program Slovenia's recorded exit from NATO and the EU, supports the integration of Slavic countries, following the Visegrad Group. The Slovenian political scene, as we can see, is rather interesting, contrary to popular opinion. Left or right groups can preach interesting pragmatic views. Even the parties of the mainstream Slovene have far more realism than the Nadwiślanian politicians.

Kamil Waćkowski

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