It was meant to be a brief journey - a visit to the Lithuanian front, where rebel forces continue their sporadic but determined resistance. Yet I never made it past Warsaw. The capital, once a proud symbol of resilience, is now choked not by traffic or bureaucracy, but by a desperate and chaotic market of arms dealers fighting over the few remaining buyers left in the city.

In the shadow of the Palace of Culture and the crumbling concrete of Plac Defilad, dealers peddle their wares with unnerving fervour. Some are loud and aggressive, shouting offers at passers-by with all the subtlety of a megaphone. Others take a more pitiful approach - hands trembling, they offer rifles in exchange for a crust of bread or a plane ticket to anywhere not here. There are those who kneel, quite literally, begging to be bought out of their inventory - and, in many cases, their misery.

The labour market has collapsed entirely. Once considered a land of emerging opportunity, Poland now sees its citizens scraping by on pitiful wages. I heard whispers - or perhaps warnings - of a man named Aduch, who reportedly worked for as little as 4pln a day! It’s a sum so degrading, one wonders not at his desperation, but at the system that allowed such degradation to become reality.

Governmental response has been absent at best, wilfully blind at worst. Cries for help echo through the air, but they vanish into the concrete halls of silent ministries. The people scream - not just for food or wages, but for dignity - and yet all they receive in return is a smirk, or nothing at all.

Meanwhile, the arms market, once booming, is cannibalising itself. Prices have plummeted so drastically that some manufacturers have already shuttered their facilities. Others, more pragmatic or simply more desperate, consider melting down their stock to sell as scrap steel to the government - steel that may yet find its way into the facades of newly built administrative towers.

This is the portrait of Warsaw today: a city of broken men selling broken things in a broken economy. My path to the front was blocked - not by soldiers or checkpoints, but by hundreds of arms traders jostling for attention, clutching weapons they can no longer sell.

What awaits Poland in the weeks or months to come? Perhaps the question is premature. Perhaps it is already too late. Only time, now, holds the answer.