Commentator Leopold Unger writes in Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper that Central Europe is the conscience of Europe. "There is a Central Europe in our memories and our experience. There is a Europe of the sell-out of Czechoslovakia in Munich in 1938, a Europe of the partition between Hitler and Stalin, a Europe between Auschwitz and the Gulag, a Europe that remained on the wrong side of the map after Yalta. There is the hinterland of the Reich and there is the Soviet satellites, and finally there is a Europe of former dissidents, opposition figures, a Europe that doggedly refuses to recognise the primacy of gas supplies over principles. This Central Europe stands as the defender of the revolution in Ukraine and Georgia. ... And today - strengthened by its Soviet experience and a thorough mistrust of the new Russian state's imperial ambitions - this Central Europe acts jointly, as a group of two countries over the missile defence shield, and as a group of six with the defence of Georgia. Just as it formerly sought to bring Europe to Kiev, so today this Europe wants to bring Nato to Tbilisi. It wants to awaken Europe's conscience and understanding at Moscow's attempt to make its 'close neighbours' once more into satellites. ... Such a Europe exists, although it has not yet made itself felt." (15/09/2008)
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