Police in central Poland responded to a late evening call over an incident that surely sent chills down the spines of Russophobe conspiracy theorists: a T-55 tank rampaging down the main street.

When police arrived at the scene in the town of Pajeczno on Thursday night, they found the Soviet-era tank casually parked on a central roadway with its two occupants nearby, one of whom was an intoxicated 49-year-old man who had been in the driver seat.

Just another day in Poland: drunken man drives tank in a small town of Pajeczno https://t.co/C0VPyV0hY1 — 🥔Karol🥟 (@scullaaaaaay) June 14, 2019

As it turns out, he had been authorized to drive the vehicle – although his superiors presumably only wanted him to move it off and on the damaged trailer on which it was being transported, rather than driving it through the city center. They also likely expected him to remain sober while operating the 36-ton armored combat vehicle. To make matters worse, local media report that there was no insurance policy on the tank.

Police were unable to get the tank off the street and onto a trailer until 5am.

The bulletproof joyride could cost the driver two years behind bars for driving under the influence, and up to eight years for creating a dangerous situation, although there are no reports of anything being destroyed or run over during the escapade.

On Twitter, quite a number of people commented that the incident had a striking similarity to the newer installments of the popular game ‘Grand Theft Auto,’ only with a distinctively Polish twist.

GTA VI: San Pajęczno 🙈https://t.co/L0VblyuvDg — Mateusz Lewicki 🇵🇱 (@lewicki_mateusz) June 14, 2019

Another person suggested that the driver’s drunken state may have resulted in some geographical, and perhaps, historical confusion.

When you start to invade Poland but realize you’re already in Poland. — Cassandrino (@Cassandrino) June 14, 2019

While the idea of an actual Russian tank attack in our day and age would seem laughable to most, that certainly isn’t the point of view of the current government in Warsaw. On Thursday, Polish President Andrzej Duda cited a litany of historical grievances against Russia while signing a massive new defense deal with the US.

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