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Key Challenges and Threats to National Security: The Polish Perspective
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By Andrzej Glen
Introduction
In the early twenty-first century, threats to the security of Poland have been substantially reassessed, and are still evolving. Currently, the threat of a conflict emerging that could lead to war on a global scale is less likely to take place. However, new sources of potential conflict have appeared that can pose serious challenges and widespread threats to Polish national security. In order to face these challenges and effectively deal with the resulting threats to its national security system, the Polish leadership needs to determine which threats are most fundamental in nature, and which are of secondary concern.
This article is intended to clarify the current challenges and threats to the national security of the Polish Republic, and to help build awareness of the challenges and threats that exist. Perhaps some of its conclusions can be of use to decision makers who are responsible for maintaining Poland’s security. The process of explaining the pressures posed by these threats to national security was best initiated by formulating a set of questions about each potential conflict: What threats to the security of the Polish Republic does it pose? How might these threats come about? And why is this particular conflict of concern?
This essay aims to overcome the difficulties arising from a teleological approach by beginning with the problem and formulating a working hypothesis that is best able to reflect the essence of the current challenges and threats to Poland’s national security. This method is made possible by the careful arrangement of a set of semantic concepts underlying the systematic study to be carried out, and then interpreting these different types of challenges and threats.
The solution of the problem and the verification of the working hypothesis required the use of both deductive and inductive research methods. The interpretation of the underlying concepts as carried out mainly through the analysis of word formation, inductive and philological reasoning, and deductive inference, which provided new scientific facts and made it possible to create the necessary definitions. However, the system of risk was constructed following the principles of formal logic and rules of dichotomous divisions of the Platonic form (as contradictory characteristics). The development of the characteristics of different types of threats was achieved through the analysis of the many examples available in the literature, conducting verbal tests of these models of threats, and a synthesis of the causal analysis of the results obtained. Finally, in drawing definitive conclusions, I relied on incomplete enumerative induction (Mill’s canons) and deductive inference.