It was assessed earlier in the month that Poland’s domestic political dynamics are “shaping up to turn next fall’s Sejm elections into a referendum on whether the US or the Franco-German Entente should be Poland’s top security partner”. The background concerned liberal Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk questioning the US’ loyalty to NATO after agreeing to hold regular nuclear drills with France. Trump then declared that the US will withdraw at least 5,000 troops from Germany and all hell broke loose in Poland.
The conservative opposition immediately proposed redeploying them to Poland, to which Tusk retorted that “I don’t think that we, as a country, should be poaching [troops]. I will not allow Poland to be used in any way to undermine solidarity or cooperation at the European level.” Tusk also posed on X that “The greatest threat to the transatlantic community are not its external enemies, but the ongoing disintegration of our alliance. We must all do what it takes to reverse this disastrous trend.”
In the eyes of his many foes, this lent credence to conservative leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski’s allegation that Tusk is a “German agent” for refusing to prioritize Poland’s perceived security interests at the risk of offending Germany. Conservative President Karol Nawrocki responded to Tusk by declaring that “If President Donald Trump decides to reduce the American military presence in Germany, then we in Poland are ready to receive American soldiers” and vowing to personally lobby Trump about this.
Several days later, Trump responded to a journalist’s question about Nawrocki’s proposal by saying that he “might” end up doing that, “it’s possible.” Tusk’s Defense Minister, Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz, then broke with his boss by tweeting that “The Polish-American alliance is the foundation of our security. Poland is ready to accept more American soldiers in order to strengthen NATO’s eastern flank and provide even better protection for Europe.” His post echoed comments at an event from a few days prior.
Trump is a polarizing figure in Poland like everywhere, but most Poles regardless of partisan disposition believe that the US military is a more reliable guarantor of their security than France. After all, it’s only fringe elements that oppose the existing presence of its nearly 10,000 troops, most costs of which are borne by Poland. It doesn’t matter what non-Poles might claim about the unlikelihood of a Russian invasion, which is what these troops are expected to deter or respond to, since most Poles truly fear it.
It’s within this socio-political context that Trump’s interest in redeploying the US’ withdrawn troops from Germany to Poland would hand the like-minded conservative opposition a victory ahead of fall 2027’s next Sejm elections due to how popular the presence of US troops is in Poland. Likewise, Kosiniak-Kamysz sensed which way the wind is blowing and decided against politicizing this as a partisan issue to avoid harming the ruling liberal coalition any more than Tusk already did, ergo his post supporting this.
Less than two weeks ago, it appeared as though “Poland Is Rapidly Falling Out Of Favor With The US” after Tusk questioned the US’ loyalty to NATO and influential Under Secretary of War for Policy Elbridge Colby praised Germany for playing the “leading role” in “NATO 3.0”. Poland’s fortunes might soon once again radically change due to Nawrocki’s personal lobbying, which would also advance the conservatives’ cause ahead of the next elections after Tusk’s politically unpopular deference to Germany’s sensitivities.
