Government spokesman Adam Szłapka said at a news conference after a Cabinet meeting that the recordings are fake and that authorities will take action in response.
The videos, first highlighted in recent days by the Res Futura collective, show women dressed in T-shirts bearing Polish national symbols.
In the videos, they criticize Poland’s government and promote the idea of a "Polexit," or Poland withdrawing from the EU.
"This material is clearly generated by artificial intelligence," Szłapka said, adding that the accounts behind them are "bots pretending to be young Polish women talking about how the European Union is bad."
"There is no doubt that this is Russian disinformation," he told reporters.
Szłapka said the narrative promoted in the videos runs counter to Poland’s national interests while fully aligning with Russian interests. He also said linguistic features in the clips point to Russian origins.
“If someone looks closely, they can see Russian syntax in these videos,” he said.
The spokesman said government agencies including the NASK National Research Institute, which focuses on cybersecurity and disinformation, would take the necessary steps to counter the campaign.
“The state has tools to fight this,” Szłapka said, urging Poles who encounter similar content online to report it.
Poland has repeatedly warned of Russian disinformation campaigns targeting public opinion, particularly on issues related to the EU, NATO and the war in Ukraine.
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Source: TVP Info, IAR, PAP