Albuquerque Journal

Trump visit cements Poland’s new status

Nation’s leaders share president’s worldview

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WARSAW, Poland — President Donald Trump is breaking with tradition by visiting Poland, an ex-communist country in central Europe, before making a presidenti­al visit to longtime allies Britain, France or Germany.

The White House has stressed Poland’s importance as a loyal NATO ally and its potential as an energy partner as reasons for Trump’s visit, which he will make Thursday just before attending a Group of 20 summit in Hamburg, Germany. But several other reasons make Poland a logical early destinatio­n.

Trump will be welcomed in Poland by populist leaders closely aligned with his worldview and who gained power in 2015 with the same brand of nationalis­tic rhetoric that has put both the new U.S. leader and the Poles in conflict with leaders in Western Europe.

Like Trump, Poland’s leaders seek to restore more national sovereignt­y and weaken internatio­nal institutio­ns like the European Union.

Trump can probably count on large enthusiast­ic crowds to greet him in Warsaw, where he is expected to give a major televised address to the nation. According to Polish media reports, that is what Poland’s government promised the White House in its invitation.

Ruling party lawmakers and progovernm­ent activists plan to bus in groups from the provinces to hear Trump’s speech.

Poles can expect only praise from Trump on their defense expenditur­es. A U.S. ally in Iraq and Afghanista­n, Poland is one of the five NATO members that spends the expected 2 percent of gross domestic product on its military.

The Poland-U.S. security relationsh­ip has also gotten a boost this year with the deployment of some 5,000 U.S. troops to Poland as part of two separate American and NATO missions. The deployment­s are meant to reassure allies on NATO’s eastern flank that the alliance is serious about protecting them from Russian aggression.

Many across the region hope to hear Trump commit himself to NATO’s Article 5, which says an attack on one member is an attack on all. Trump finally did so in June, standing alongside the Romanian president in the Rose Garden.

Still, it would mean a lot to an anxious region to hear those words spoken on soil closer to Russia.

The hundreds of thousands of Polish-American voters in the United States represent an important constituen­cy in several battlegrou­nd states, and last year they helped give Trump the edge he needed in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia.

They will certainly be grateful for Trump’s visit to Warsaw, especially since he has chosen to address Poles at Krasinski Square, a location that symbolizes Polish heroism during World War II.

That large square has a memorial to the Warsaw Uprising of 1944, a courageous but doomed uprising against Nazi Germany that resulted in more than 200,000 Polish deaths and the destructio­n of Warsaw.

During Trump’s visit to Warsaw, he will also attend a summit devoted to the Three Seas Initiative, an effort to expand and modernize energy and trade links among 12 countries located between the Baltic, Adriatic and Black seas.

One driving purpose of the initiative is to make the region less dependent on Russian energy. Under the project, U.S. exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG), which began arriving in Poland in early June, would have the potential to supply more of the region.

The visit coincides with efforts by Trump’s administra­tion to become a net exporter of oil, gas and other resources to boost U.S. revenues and influence.

 ?? ALIK KEPLICZ/AP ?? Two women in Warsaw, Poland, walk by a poster advertisin­g U.S. President Donald Trump’s upcoming visit. The poster reads “Donald Trump: First Public Appearance in Europe.”
ALIK KEPLICZ/AP Two women in Warsaw, Poland, walk by a poster advertisin­g U.S. President Donald Trump’s upcoming visit. The poster reads “Donald Trump: First Public Appearance in Europe.”

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