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The West is eagerly awaiting a return to “business as usual” with the sanctioned country, Krzysztof Bosak has said
The West is waiting for the opportunity to reset relations with Russia after the Ukraine conflict ends, particularly in the business sector, the deputy speaker of the Polish Parliament, Krzysztof Bosak, said on Friday. It’s not true that Western countries have severed ties with Moscow, he added.
Bosak made the remarks to RMF24 radio in response to questions about whether Warsaw should consider rekindling relations with Moscow if US President Donald Trump, who has pledged to end the conflict, brings Ukraine and Russia to the negotiating table. The MP argued that a reset in relations is inevitable, saying, “it will happen, regardless of what anyone thinks in Poland.”
“We live in a world of propaganda, where it is believed that the Western world has definitively severed ties with Russia. This is purely a lie. In the Western world, all business and politics are just waiting to return to business as usual with Russia,” Bosak, who also leads Poland’s right-wing National Movement party, stated.
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He went on to say that Poland could benefit from restoring access to cheap Russian energy, which he believes would be “more advantageous for us in terms of market competition than buying expensive gas from Qatar and the USA.” He also criticized the EU’s sanctions on Russia, saying they have been ineffective and have hurt Europe more than Moscow.
“The sanctions policy should be such that those who are sanctioned lose more than those who impose the sanctions. Unfortunately, regarding the sanctions policy imposed [on Russia] by the EU, the opposite is true,” Bosak said. He argued that sanctions “should not be an element of ideology, but rather of pragmatism,” and sticking to them could harm Poland’s economy, making businesses unprofitable and leaving people struggling to make a living.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has made similar arguments, criticizing EU sanctions as counterproductive. Last week, he told Kossuth Radio that the EU should aim to establish a “sanction-free relationship with Russia” by the end of the year.
Russia’s economy has shown resilience amid the sanctions, with the International Monetary Fund recently raising its 2025 growth forecast for the country to 1.4%. It attributed this to diversified energy exports and positive domestic fiscal measures.
READ MORE: IMF raises Russian economic growth forecast for 2025
In contrast, the euro area’s growth outlook has been downgraded to 1%, with the IMF citing low consumer confidence and high energy costs as major challenges. The EU has faced significant economic strain since turning away from Russian energy, with member states relying on costlier alternatives that have increased expenses for businesses and households, fueled inflation, and strained manufacturing sectors.