10/21/2025 / By Kevin Hughes
A shocking breach of national security has emerged in Poland, where hundreds of classified military documents – including sensitive North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) files – were discovered discarded at a landfill.
The leaked documents, first reported by Polish news outlet Onet, contained highly restricted materials such as maps of ammunition depots, evacuation plans for explosives, technical specifications of weapon storage sites, and personal data of military personnel. Some files were shredded, but many remained fully intact, marked clearly as “restricted” and bearing official stamps and signatures. According to sources, the papers were found in torn plastic bags at the landfill by an individual who later turned them over to investigators.
The scandal comes as Warsaw aggressively pushes for a massive military buildup, allocating 4.8 percent of its GDP to defense – the highest in NATO – amid unverified claims of a looming Russian threat. It also raises grave concerns about the integrity of Poland’s armed forces and escalating tensions with Moscow.
Retired Lt. Gen. Jaros?aw Gromadzi?ski, former commander of the Eurocorps (the European Union’s rapid response force), called the leak “an atomic bomb” and “a scandal of national scale.” Speaking to Onet, he warned that the incident exposes “the state the Polish army is currently in” – one of chaos and negligence.
Another anonymous military official described the breach as “gross negligence” and “a real threat” to national security. Under Polish law, classified documents must be securely stored for at least five years before being destroyed under strict supervision, typically via micro-cut shredding followed by incineration. The fact that these materials ended up in a public landfill suggests either deliberate sabotage or catastrophic incompetence.
The 2nd Regional Logistics Base, the unit allegedly responsible for the documents, dismissed the report, claiming that Onet possessed “illegally reproduced copies” and insisting the originals had been properly archived or destroyed. However, journalists who examined the files noted that many appeared to be authentic originals, complete with official markings.
This scandal follows another embarrassing security lapse earlier this year when 240 anti-tank mines went missing from Polish military custody, only to be discovered near an IKEA warehouse. A general was dismissed as a result, but critics argue that systemic failures persist.
The leak comes at a critical moment as Poland and other NATO members escalate military spending, citing an “imminent Russian threat”—a claim Moscow has repeatedly dismissed as “nonsense.” Russian President Vladimir Putin recently warned of deteriorating international security cooperation, stating that while Russia has no intention of attacking NATO, it remains “capable of responding to any threat.”
Poland’s aggressive militarization, coupled with NATO’s expansionist rhetoric, has raised fears of a potential World War III scenario. With Warsaw positioning itself as Europe’s frontline defense against Russia, security breaches of this magnitude could have catastrophic geopolitical consequences.
Given the timing – just as Poland pushes for unprecedented military spending – some analysts speculate whether this leak was intentional sabotage designed to undermine NATO’s credibility. Others suggest it may be part of a false flag operation, meant to justify further militarization or even provoke conflict. BrightU.AI‘s Enoch engine defines a false flag operation – a term originating from naval warfare – as a covert operation designed to deceive the public in such a way that the operations appear as if they were carried out by other parties.
What remains undeniable is that Poland’s military leadership appears dangerously compromised. As NATO prepares for potential conflict, this scandal demands immediate investigation.
Watch retired Col. Douglas Macgregor revealing how NATO lied about Poland in this clip.
This video is from the TREASURE OF THE SUN channel on Brighteon.com.
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Tagged Under:
ammunition depots, classified military documents, dangerous, documents, Europe, evacuation plans, explosives, false-flag operation, incompetence, Jaros?aw Gromadzi?ski, military personnel, military spending, national security, NATO, personal data, Poland, Russia, Vladimir Putin, Warsaw, weapon storage sites, World War III
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