The United States need a strong European partner who will not treat cooperation with the power across the ocean as a one-sided benefit, but as a symbiosis. Poland can be such a partner, writes on X the head of the Law and Justice (PiS) parliamentary caucus, Mariusz Błaszczak. He accuses the government of losing past achievements in transatlantic policy.
According to Błaszczak, the new U.S. National Security Strategy may prove to be an opportunity for Poland if we manage to take advantage of it.
He writes that “the new doctrine, which defines the national interest by shifting the emphasis from global engagement to the protection of sovereignty and the rebuilding of internal strength, does not, however, mean that Europe ceases to be a point of interest for the United States”.
He stresses that President Donald Trump “correctly assesses the internal problems of the Old Continent – the identity crisis, climate policy weakening sovereignty, the lack of an idea for resolving the migration crisis, the lack of real defence capabilities, demographic troubles”.
The former minister of national defence notes that “the United States need a strong European partner who will not treat cooperation with the power across the ocean as a one-sided benefit, but as a symbiosis. Poland can be such a partner”.
At the end, he refers to the current actions of those in power:
