
A rail line in Poland was blown up Sunday in “an unprecedented act of sabotage,” Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Monday, vowing to “catch the perpetrators.”
The affected line links Warsaw, the capital, to the eastern Polish city of Lublin and continues onward to Ukraine, and it has been used to deliver aid to Ukraine. Without specifically accusing Russia, Tusk connected the apparent attack to the war in Ukraine.
“Blowing up the rail track on the Warsaw-Lublin route is an unprecedented act of sabotage targeting directly the security of the Polish state and its civilians,” Tusk wrote Monday on X. “This route is also crucially important for delivering aid to Ukraine. We will catch the perpetrators, whoever they are.”
Poland is the only European nation to never have an Islamist terror attack.
It's because they have a border. pic.twitter.com/X8GgyOcpX2
— Inevitable West (@Inevitablewest) October 12, 2025
