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Polish daily says FM sidelines top diplomats suspected of disloyalty

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  • Polish daily says FM sidelines top diplomats suspected of disloyalty

    Polish daily says Foreign Ministry sidelines top diplomats suspected
    of disloyalty

    Gazeta Wyborcza website, Warsaw
    2 Jul 07


    [Report by Jacek Pawlicki: "Fotyga's Dunce Bench" - first paragraph
    published in boldface]

    They write official memos, although often for themselves. They come to
    work, although no one needs them. The greatest experts, whom no one at
    the Foreign Ministry listens to.

    This is not about any retired diplomats' club, but rather the dunce
    bench of the Polish Foreign Ministry, which includes experience
    diplomats, former ministers and deputy ministers. For various reasons,
    they have fallen out of favour with those in power. No other country in
    Europe would allow itself to ignore such individuals. Yet in Poland,
    this is being done by a party whose reserve bench of personnel - as
    concerns foreign policy - is essentially empty. And by the foreign
    minister from this party, who is experiencing difficulty in finding the
    right people to man embassies in such key countries for Polish foreign
    policy as France, Italy, and Spain.

    Expert Paying Social Visits to the Foreign Ministry

    The term "dunce bench" is said to have been coined by former Foreign
    Minister Stefan Meller, at the birthday celebration of another former
    foreign minister, Wladyslaw Bartoszewski. The salon diplomats rejected
    by PiS do stick together. They share Solidarity backgrounds, a desire
    to serve the country, and often a dislike for what is going on in
    Polish politics. And one more thing: almost all of them lost their
    previous positions at the Foreign Ministry in an atmosphere of
    innuendos, without any clearly stated accusations, frequently being
    suspected of disloyalty. Now most of them are employed as low-level
    clerks. All of them collect their salaries, although without any
    managerial bonuses.

    The Foreign Ministry leadership does not expect much from them. And
    were it not for the fact that they are experts whose qualifications are
    going to waste, we might say that PiS has granted them excellent
    vacations. The dean of the dunce bench, Stefan Meller, himself stepped
    down as foreign minister in the PiS government in May 2006, as a sign
    of protest against Andrzej Lepper's joining the cabinet. He retained a
    job at the Foreign Ministry - in the Eastern European department, where
    he is officially responsible for Armenian-Turkish relations. He
    essentially pays social visits to the ministry, since he has been
    relieved of the obligation to come to work.

    Stanislaw Komorowski, a physicist, diplomat, and former ambassador the
    Hague and London, also stepped down as deputy foreign minister of his
    own volition, in spring 2006. He did so, as he explained to Gazeta
    Wyborcza, because he felt awkward as undersecretary of state given the
    political situation at the time. He could be an excellent ambassador in
    any European capital, yet he is a rank-and-file employee at the
    ministry's Asia and Pacific department (of which he was once director).
    Officially he is responsible for Europe's relations with Asia, but
    everyone in the Foreign Ministry corridors knows that is fiction.

    Off the record, President Lech Kaczynski is known to hold it against
    Komorowski that he resigned via Gazeta Wyborcza (we were the first to
    write about his decision). That is why he allegedly told Komorowski
    that as long as he was president, Komorowski would never be sent out on
    any diplomatic posting.

    Disappearing From the Minister's View

    The Foreign Ministry's archives, whose buildings are located in a
    different part of Warsaw than the main ministry building on Sucha
    Street, has become an extension of the dunce bench. The talk in the
    corridors is that this is where the current leaders send people whom
    Minister Fotyga does not want to set eyes on. Henryk Szlajfer,
    dismissed from the post of director of the North American department in
    autumn 2006 due to suspicions that he had lied on his vetting
    statement, has just become head of the archives.

    Szlajfer, a former oppositionist and a participant in the March 1968
    events, was slated to become ambassador to the United States when
    allegations publicly appeared in June 2005 that he had cooperated with
    the SB [Communist-era Security Service]. Szlajfer denied this and
    wanted to have his name cleared by the vetting court. Yet the court
    refused, since he did not hold any post that was subject to vetting
    requirements. The case has not been cleared up to this very day, and
    Szlajfer's skills and experience have been locked up in the archives.

    Also waiting on the dunce bench is Pawel Dobrowolski, former director
    of the information system department, Foreign Ministry press spokesman
    during Meller's time, and former ambassador to Ottowa. He lost his post
    as director during the uproar of the so-called potato affair (in July
    2006, the German daily Tageszeitung called President Kaczynski a
    potato). What Dobrowolski had done wrong was to place that article on
    the Foreign Ministry's publicly accessible web page reviewing foreign
    press articles writing about Poland. That site is now no more, and
    Dobrowolski is a rank-and-file employee of the department where he was
    previously director. Albeit only on paper - in reality, no one requires
    anything from him.

    A Leak and the Deputy Minister Is Gone

    One special case is that of Ryszard Schnepf, former secretary of state
    and foreign affairs adviser to Prime Minister Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz,
    forced to resign in May 2006. Officially because, as he himself said,
    "the concept he was developing of having EU countries, including
    Poland, join the Baltic gas pipeline construction project did not win
    his superiors' recognition, and his idea itself was regrettably
    publicized." Off the record, he is known to have become a scapegoat: he
    said something too early, something Marcinkiewicz was meant to publicly
    announce, something the Kaczynski brothers did not want to consent to.

    Schnepf wanted to be ambassador in Madrid (he knows Spanish and the
    Spanish political scene) or one of the countries in Latin America (he
    was ambassador to Uruguay). He stands no chance, since he once fell
    afoul with Jan Kobylanski, a controversial businessman from Uruguay now
    influential at the Foreign Ministry. As consolation, a special position
    for global problems was created at the Foreign Ministry for Schnepf.
    His colleagues from the Foreign Ministry joke that he is "fighting bird
    flu." In his free time between fighting global threats, Schnepf teaches
    Spanish studies.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Witold Sobkow has also been pushed onto the
    dunce bench. In October, this experienced diplomat and former
    ambassador to Ireland became deputy foreign minister responsible for
    European affairs. But his contacts with Minister Fotyga did not go very
    well. And so Sobkow ceased to be deputy minister in December. The
    Foreign Ministry took advantage of a leak made to a certain daily,
    which wrote that he allegedly had difficulty with gaining clearance
    from the Internal Security Agency [ABW] for confidential documents.
    Sobkow denied that, but Fotyga asked the ABW to check the deputy
    minister in detail.

    Ultimately the ABW decided that Sobkow was clean as a whistle, but he
    did not come back into favour. He became a rank-and-file employee at
    the department for foreign policy strategy and planning. Sometimes he
    travels abroad to various conferences and seminars. He himself has
    imposed discipline on his work - setting himself the goal of writing
    two analytic notes per week, to stay in shape. As an Italian studies
    specialist he would be an excellent candidate for the post of
    ambassador in Rome, but the Foreign Ministry does not have anyone to
    send there.
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