"You are building one of the biggest armies in NATO," the chief of the Alliance Jens Stoltenberg said on Thursday after meeting with Poland's President Andrzej Duda. He added that "Poland makes the whole Alliance stronger". The Polish president reiterated his call that each NATO member state increase its defence spending up to 3 percent of GDP. "Today we need greater force," he added.
Poland's President Andrzej Duda met on Thursday (March 14) in Brussels with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.
Stoltenberg: Poland makes the whole Alliance stronger
After the talks, Duda and Stoltenberg held a press conference. "You are building one of the biggest armies in NATO. You spend around 4 percent of GDP on defence, topping the NATO table. And you are adding major capabilities, including F35s, HIMARS, and helicopters. Poland makes the whole Alliance stronger, and NATO makes all Allies safer," Stoltenberg said.
"U.S. Patriot batteries and Italian jets guard your skies. Over 10,000 Allied troops are based in Poland. And in the summer a long-planned U.S. missile defence site in Poland will join NATO’s missiile shield," he added
"Today in our meeting we addressed Russia’s war aggression against Ukraine. Despite heavy Russian losses, Putin has not scaled back his war aims. The situation remains difficult. Ukrain is in a dire need of ammunition," said the secretary general.
Stoltenberg also commented on the situation in the U.S. and the Congress' lack of approval for further support for Ukraine. "Every day of delay in the U.S. Congress transfers into real effects on the battlefield. This morning we released our latest polling across the Alliance. It shows that two-thirds of citizens on both sides of the Atlantic want their country to continue supporting Ukraine."
The NATO chief also thanked Poles for supporting Ukraine in its war against Russia and for helping refugees. He stressed that since joining the Alliance "Poland has become a key ally and security provider".
Duda: three generations of Poles waited for that moment 25 years ago
President Duda spoke next. "I'm delighted that in this very sublime moment for us Poles, on the 25th anniversary of Poland's accession to the North-Atlantic Alliance, I have this huge honor and pleasure to visit this crucial place from Poland's perspective, in political terms," he said of the NATO Headquarters in Brussels.
Duda then thanked Stoltenberg. "Thank you secretary general for those nearly nine last years, in which I've had the pleasure to work with you, and I'm grateful that today we can look from a perspective how much NATO has changed, and how much Poland's situation has changed within NATO along the last decade, partially thanks to you. We are extremely grateful to you for this as a nation, as Poles."
He added that "in fact three generations of Poles had waited for that important moment that happened 25 years ago". "When we were joining NATO in 1999, I was only 27. I was a molded, grown-up man and I remember it very well. Those were watershed moments. They have placed us back, in a political sense, among members of the community of free, democratic West, which we always underscore. We have always been part of it, but politics would separate us from it. Until we have returned at the turn of the 20th and the 21st century," he added.
President Duda stressed that Poland is a crucial element on the NATO's eastern flank. "No only do we receive security from our allies, but we also provide this security," he said.
The Polish leader also reiterated his call his call that each NATO member state increase its defence spending up to 3 percent of GDP. "Two percent was sufficient in the situation we had back in 2014 when Russia began occuaption of Crimea, but did not launch a full-scale attack. Today we need greater force," he explained.
Duda and Tusk met with Biden
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk warned U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson on Tuesday that "the fate of millions of people" and "thousands of lives" depends on whether the Republican allows a vote on $60 billion in military aid to Ukraine.
"This is not some political skirmish that (only) matters on the American political scene. Mr Johnson's failure to make a positive decision will cost thousands of lives. He takes personal responsibility for that," Tusk told reporters.
Tusk made the comment after he and Polish President Andrzej Duda met at the White House with U.S. President Joe Biden, who told them that U.S. support for Poland is ironclad amid concerns in Europe about Russia.
Biden and the Polish leaders urged Johnson to move ahead with a vote on an aid package that passed the Senate, but that the House Republican leader has held up. Former President Donald Trump, the front-runner for the Republican party's 2024 presidential nomination, opposes aid to Kyiv.
Tusk: fate of millions are in Johnson's hands
Tusk made clear what he feels are the stakes for Ukraine in its battle against Russian invaders.
"He must be aware ... that the fate of millions of people depends on his individual decisions, and thousands of lives in Ukraine today and tomorrow depend on his decisions," Tusk said of Johnson.
Johnson's office declined comment. Earlier, after Johnson met Duda, his office issued a statement that did not address the Ukraine funding impasse.
"In an increasingly dangerous world with growing threats, America must remain united with our friends against those who threaten our security," Johnson said.
Duda's call for higher defence spending
Biden and the Poland leaders took stock of the security situation in Europe and what recent Russian territorial gains in Ukraine might mean for the region.
Duda brought up with Biden his campaign for NATO allies to increase their defense spending from 2% of GDP to 3% in response to what he called "the full-scale war launched by Russia right beyond NATO's eastern border."
"Russia's aggression against Ukraine clearly demonstrated that the United States is and should remain the security leader," he said. "But other allies must take more responsibility for the security of the alliance as a whole."
Biden: U.S. support for Poland is ironclad
Biden, celebrating Poland's 25 years as a NATO member, reiterated U.S. support for NATO's Article 5 mutual defense treaty, under which an attack against one ally is considered an attack against all. He said American support for Poland is ironclad.
Last month, Democrat Biden's likely generalelection rival, Republican former President Donald Trump, said he would not protect NATO allies who did not spend enough on defense and would encourage Russia "to do whatever the hell they want" with such countries.
The U.S. president urged Congress to approve legislation that would send $60 billion in security aid for Ukraine. The Senate passed the bill last month in a bipartisan vote, but Republican hardliners in the House of Representatives have stalled it.
"We must act before it literally is too late because, as Poland remembers, Russia won't stop at Ukraine. Putin will keep going, putting Europe and the United States and the entire free world at risk, in my view," said Biden.
Apaches for Poland and Sikorski's plea
Tusk said ahead of the meeting that he would raise with Biden the need for NATO to strengthen its capabilities on its eastern flank to deter Russia.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters ahead of the talks that the United States will offer to sell 96 Apache attack helicopters to Poland and will approve a $2 billion direct foreign aid loan for Warsaw.
Speaking before the talks, Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski urged Johnson to allow a vote on the Ukraine funds, but toned down an earlier plea in which he said the Republican speaker would be blamed if the bill failed and Russian troops advanced.
"If the American package doesn't arrive ... Ukraine might be in difficulty, and that might eventually mean the need for more American troops in Europe," he told reporters at a Monitor breakfast.
Sikorski also appealed to Johnson's Baptist faith, saying that Russia "persecutes religious minorities, including Baptists" in Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine.
Źródło: TVN24 News in English, TVN24