The most numerous armed forces within the EU, and the third in NATO, have today their celebration - the
Polish Armed Forces Day 
, on the occasion of which the traditional annual land and air defilade was held.
The defilade commemorates the victorious
Battle of Warsaw, that took place on August 14-15, 1920, between the Armed Forces of the reborn Second Republic of Poland and the Russian bolshevik invaders on the outskirts of the capital city of Warsaw. The battle turned out to be a turning point of not only the
1919-1921 Polish-Soviet War, but also of European history: the defeat suffered by the Soviet Russia forced the invaders from the East to panically retreat, and prompted the Russian communist dictator Lenin to abandon his vile plans of all-European communist revolution. The Russian totalitarians Lenin, Stalin and Trotsky had intended to direct their barbaric, revolutionary Red Army toward Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Italy, Hungary, and many other European countries, that still were painfully remembering the recently finished First World War, in order to come with military help for local revolutionary communist parties.
Thereby, after the repulsion of Batu Khan’s (Genghis Khan’s grandson’s) Mongols in the battle of Legnica in 1241, and after the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in the battle of Vienna in 1683, the Polish Soldier saved Europe from foreign barbarians for one more time. The defilade is
de facto Poland’s ideological counterweight to the Putinist Russia’s faked 9th May Day, when the Putinist Russia, leaving aside in silence the Lend-Lease program, celebrates its soviet predecessor’s posed victory over the Soviet Union’s former (1939-1941) ally, thanks to which the totalitarian USSR could enslave half of Europe behind the Iron Curtain for nearly half of century.
Preparations and rehearsals for the parade, including at night, are carefully covered every year in the Polish media many days prior to the defilade. In the today’s defilade we could see,
inter alia, the Leopard 2PLM1, K2 Black Panther and M1A1 FEP Abrams tanks, the Krab and K9A1 Thunder howitzers, and the WR-40 Langusta rocket artillery launchers, the Poprad and Pilica anti-aircraft guns, the powerful HIMARS-es (in Poland known also as the Homar-A) and Chunmoo (in Poland known also as the Homar-K), the Gladius self-propelled drone launchers and the Waran multirole vehicles. We could also see the combat-proof Rosomak IFVs and Rak self-propelled mortars. The prototypes of upcoming vehicles being currently developed by the Polish military industry - the Baobab-K, Borsuk and Kleszcz - were also present. And many, many more.
The ground vehicles were accompanied from the air by the F-16 fighters and the PZL-130 Orlik trainers of the Polish Air Force, as well as by the Mi-24 and Blackhawk helicopters. The Czech

Mi-17 and the U.S. Army’s Apache helicopters, and the USAF’s F-35 fighters were present too - the latter ones remember us the participation of the
American volunteer aerial corps 
during the War over one hundred years ago. However, the aerial component of the defilade had been more numerous and varied one year ago.
In the defilade also honorable representatives of Poland’s friends from the Polish-Soviet War — the Great Britain

, the United States

, and Romania

— participated actively as guests both during the infantry part and during the vehicle part, and of whose presence we are very honored. Happy victory day to everyone!