Wojciech Jaruzelski
Wojciech Witold Jaruzelski (born
July 6,
1923) in the family of Polish gentry was a communist
Polish political and military leader.
Following
Nazi-Soviet pact as a child deported to Asian part of
Soviet Union (see
Polish areas annexed by Soviet Union), where his father dies of lack of medical treatment.
An officer of the Polish
Army, he was trained at the Polish Higher
Infantry School and the General Staff Academy, and joined the
Polish United Workers' Party (the former Polish
Communist Party), of which Central Committee he became a member in
1964. Soon he was also named the minister of defense.
In 1968 he was heavily involved in the "cleansing" of the Polish army due to Moczar's antisemite campaign. In the same year, he led the invasion on
Czechoslovakia. \nIn 1970 was involved in the plot against
Wladyslaw Gomulka, probably took part in organisation of the massacre in the coastal cities of
Gdansk,
Gdynia,
Elblag and
Szczecin.
Jaruzelski became the party's national secretary and prime minister in
1981, when
Lech Walesa's movement (
Solidarity) was starting to earn national and external popularity. The
Soviet Union became more and more concerned and threatened with invasion - a very credible threat, as they had invaded
Afghanistan two years before. To avert this, Jaruzelski imposed
martial law. The leaders of
Solidarnosc were confined to a luxury resort, where, a.o.,
Lech Walesa was spotted enjoying lure-fishing.
The policies of
Mikhail Gorbachev also stipulated political reform in Poland. By the close of the 10th plenary session in December 1988, the Communist Party had decided to broach leaders of Solidarity for talks. These talks, which became known as the "roundtable talks," with 13 working groups in 94 sessions from February 6 to April 15, radically altered the shape of the Polish government and society. The talks resulted in an agreement in which real political power was vested in a newly created bicameral legislature and in a president who would be the chief executive. Solidarity was legalized. After the elections, the Communists, who were guaranteed 65 percent of the seats in the Sejm (the parliament), did not win a majority, and Solidarity-backed candidates won 99 out of 100 freely contested seats in the Senate. Jaruzelski, whose name was the only one the Communist Party allowed on the ballot for the presidency, won by just one vote in the
National Assembly.
Although Jaruzelski tried to persuade Solidarity to join the Communists in a "grand coalition,"
Lech Walesa refused. Jaruzelski resigned as general secretary of the Communist Party but found he was forced to come to terms with a government formed by Solidarity. In 1990 Jaruzelski resigned as Poland's leader. Subsequently, Jaruzelski has faced charges for a number of actions he committed while he was defense minister during the communist period.
See also: List of Presidents of Poland
Jaruzelski, Wojciech\nJaruzelski, Wojciech\nJaruzelski, Wojciech\nJaruzelski, Wojciech
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