Poland joined NATO in 1999, but Krasnodebski said the alliance is not enough.
“A guerrilla force is always difficult to fight against,” he said. “If there was fighting in Poland, there would be problems with supply lines, subversive activity. That’s always difficult for the opposing military.”
Monika Pawlik, a 24-year-old town clerk and young mother, was one of four women at a training session last winter.
“I wanted to try something new, and above all I wanted to have this sense of security,” she said.
Marcin Wierzbicki, a 44-year-old manager at an energy company, said that by joining WOT he is following in his family's tradition set forth by his grandfathers of defending Poland.
Wierzbicki said he does not expect to take part in battles, but to support the operational army, guard key assets, control road points and so on.
“Poland will be safer now and in the future,” he said.