NATO member Poland will soon send a guide for his citizens about the survival of future crises, after it had warned his male population, they should go through military training in the midst of rising tensions with Russia.
The country, which borders on both Ukraine and Russia, will send the pamphlets to households this year.
The booklets will inform them about 'how to deal with different dangerous situations', a deputy director of the civil protection unit of the Ministry of the Interior, Robert Klonowski, told the Pap News Agency.
Citizens get war tips on how they deal with 'a power outage that lasts a few days or a few hours,' he said, adding that the information would also serve to respond to natural disasters.
The brochure will be published in Polish and in the Ukrainian for the approximately 900,000 Ukrainian refugees in the country.
“We are also planning a special version, or at least a part of this guide, addressed to children,” Klonowski added.
Poland is one of Kiev's fervent allies in the European Union and organizes a logistics hub through which NATO and EU member states have sent military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine.
It has carefully seen Russia and has performed its defense, while the invasion of Vladimir Putin is raging.
Last week, Poland has made a war foot, in which Prime Minister Donald Tusk revealed that his government is working out a system to train all men militarily in the case of a war.

Polish army soldiers participate in a Lithuanian-Polish Brave Griffin 24/II military exercise near the Suwalki gorge near the Polish border in the Dirmiskes Village, in Lithuania on Friday, April 26, 2024

Members of the National Police Special Purpose Battalion of the Zaporizhzhia region shoot a D-30 Houwisser to Russian troops on a front line, amidst Russian attack on Ukraine, in the Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine on March 7, 202

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk (photo) revealed that his government is working out a system to train all men militarily in the case of a war
Tusk told the SEJM of the country – the lower house of parliament – that military training would create a spare power that 'is sufficient to possible threats'.
Civil servants want a plan for the scheme, which would also be open to female volunteers, completed at the end of the year.
The same day he revealed that he had serious discussions with France about falling under the protection of their nuclear umbrella against his parliament.
During his announcement, Tusk emphasized that the Eastern European province could not only rely on conventional weapons, and noted that Ukraine had given up his nuclear ammunition to be attacked by Russia.
“We must be aware that Poland must achieve the most modern capacities, also related to nuclear weapons and modern unconventional weapons … This is a safety race, not for war,” he said.
NATO member Poland exists in a unique and precarious, geographical position in Europe that has forced to take its safety seriously.
A Russian exclusion, Kaliningrad, borders Poland in the North, while Ukraine is located in the east of the country.
Other EU countries alerted in the Russian expansionist ambitions have performed the public readiness for future crises.

Tusk said that military training would create a spare power that is 'sufficient for possible threats' (shown: volunteers participating in basic training with the Polish army in Nowogrod, Poland, on Thursday, June 20, 2024)

President Donald Trump shifted the American position of a defender of Ukraine to remember military help, intelligence and to give support for Russia and Vladimir Putin
Sweden has already issued a similar information brochure, while Finland has a website that collects information about how ready citizens are for various emergency situations.
The European Union agreed last week to stimulate the defense of the continent and to free up hundreds of billions of euros for safety in response to the attitude of the Trump administration in Ukraine.
Special envoy Steve Witkoff from the White House told FOX News on Monday that the break of sharing information in the US has not limited Ukraine to sharing the defense inflammations.
“We never closed intelligence for … something defensive that the Ukrainians need,” said Mr. Witkoff.
A break about sharing American information that can be used for offensive purposes by Ukrainian armed forces remains in force, according to an American officer who is familiar with the case that was not authorized to comment and spoke about the condition of anonymity.
The official suggested that progress could be made in repairing intelligence with Ukraine during Saudi conversations.