Polish MP says Poland set to be marginalized as German-Russian relations ‘thaw’ after election

“Unfortunately, the current Polish government is playing in a German orchestra”

April 7, 2010 - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, right, and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, left, shake hands after a memorial ceremony for 22,000 Polish prisoners of war killed by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's secret police in 1940 in Katyn, Russia, Smolensk region, west from Moscow. Three days later President Lech Kaczyński along with 95 people died in the Smolensk air crash. (AP Photo/Sergey Ponomarev)
By Remix News Staff
2 Min Read

PiS MP and former Deputy Minister of Justice Sebastian Kaleta posted on X after Germany’s elections, declaring the result a serious threat to Poland’s sovereignty. 

“The frontal attack on President Trump’s administration by Donald Tusk’s team and the first post-election speech of the future German Chancellor Merz show that a very dangerous plan for Poland is being implemented,” he wrote. 

Kaltea claims that despite the close relationship Poland has with the U.S. and ongoing talks between the new Trump administration and President Duda, all the work of the past several weeks could be in jeopardy. The U.S. saw “a strengthened role for Poland with a diminished role for Germany, whose disastrous policy has strengthened Russia, the consequence of which is the war in Ukraine,” he says. 

“The attack by the government and the media entourage of Tusk on the Trump administration and the passive attitude in the EU by resigning from the summit and giving the field to Macron clearly indicate that Donald Tusk is not interested in such a plan for Poland. Why? Because he is the executor of the new plan of Germany,” said the MP. 

Kaleta believes that the new German government will return to the policy of pushing the U.S. out of the region and promoting German-Russian domination, which “elites” in Berlin support.   

The MP believes that peace negotiations in Ukraine will be all about “the future reconstruction of relations with Russia and an even stronger subordination of Ukraine to German policy.”

“Unfortunately, the current Polish government is playing in a German orchestra,” Kaleta stated.

The greatest danger to Poland, according to the MP, is what Merz intends to implement with Tusk: “Merz’s announcement of seeking to weaken NATO’s position in Europe by centralizing the EU and creating something like a European army means total marginalization of Poland and surrendering our fate to the Russian-German thaw being revived in the seclusion of cabinets.”

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