Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov accused Poland on Friday of engaging in a "hostile rhetoric" and warned it could be a source of threat to Ukraine's territorial integrity.
"The fact that very hostile rhetoric has been coming out of Poland in recent months, it has traditionally not been friendly for a long time, but in recent months it has become hostile, and a threat to the territorial integrity of Ukraine from Poland can emanate, these are obvious facts," Peskov told reporters.
The comments come after Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of committing "genocide" and "war crimes" in Ukraine. "I believe the war is going to be over sooner rather than later. But it all depends on the courage and determination of the Ukrainian nation," Morawiecki said in an interview with Euronews and reiterated his country is in favor of "the harshest set of sanctions" against Russia.