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Poland–United States relations

Official relations between Poland and the United States on a diplomatic level were initiated in 1919 after Poland had established itself as a republic after 123 years of being under foreign rule from the Partitions of Poland. However, ties with the United States date back to the 17th century, when the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was one of Europe's largest powers, and many Poles immigrated to the Thirteen Colonies. During the American Revolutionary War, the Polish military commanders Tadeusz Kościuszko and Casimir Pułaski contributed greatly to the Patriot cause, with Kościuszko becoming a national hero in America. Since 1989, Polish–American relations have been strong and Poland is one of the chief European allies of the United States, being part of both NATO and the European Union. There is a strong cultural appreciation between the two nations (Polonophilia). According to the US Department of State, Poland remains a "stalwart ally" and "one of strongest Continental partners in fostering security and prosperity, throughout Europe and the world."[1] Poland was also one of four participating countries in the American-led Iraq War coalition in 2003.

Polish–American relations

Poland

United States
Diplomatic mission
Polish Embassy, Washington, D.C.United States Embassy, Warsaw
Envoy
Ambassador Marek MagierowskiAmbassador Mark Brzezinski

In addition to close historical ties, Poland is one of the most consistently pro-American nations in Europe and the world, with 79% of Poles viewing the US favorably in 2002 and 67% in 2013.[2] According to the 2012 US Global Leadership Report, 36% of Poles approve of American leadership, with 30% disapproving and 34% uncertain,[3] and in a 2013 BBC World Service Poll, 55% of Poles view US influence positively, the highest rating for any surveyed European country.[4]

Before 20th century edit

 
Kosciuszko statue in Lafayette Park, Washington, DC

The partitions of Poland erased Poland from the map in 1795 and long prevented the establishment of official diplomatic relations between Poland and the new United States. However, Poland, which enacted the world's second-oldest constitution in 1791, always considered the United States a positive influence. Even in the 18th century, important Polish figures such as Tadeusz Kościuszko and Casimir Pulaski became closely involved with shaping US history. Haym Salomon, a Polish Jew, was the prime financier of the American side during the American Revolutionary War against Great Britain. Many Poles also emigrated to the United States in the 19th century and formed a large Polish American community in urban centres such as Chicago.

American response to November Uprising edit

 
The American writer Edgar Allan Poe wished to join a possible Polish Army to fight off the partitioning powers.

Poland's November Uprising in 1831 and the fight for regaining independence from the neighbouring empires were extensively documented and editorialized in American newspapers. As the historian Jerzy Jan Lerski described, "one could reproduce in detail virtually the whole story of the November Uprising from the 1831 files of American dailies published at that time, regardless of the fact that they were usually four-sheet affairs with little space left for foreign news."[5] There were very few Poles in the United States at the time, but views of Poland were shaped positively by its support for the American Revolution. Several young men offered their military services to fight for Poland, the most well-known of which was Edgar Allan Poe, who wrote a letter to his commanding officer March 10, 1831 to join the Polish Army if it was created in France.[citation needed]

Support for Poland was highest in the South, as Casimir Pulaski's death in Savannah, Georgia, was well-remembered and memorialized. An American surgeon, Dr. Paul Fitzsimmons, from the Georgia, actually joined the Polish Army in 1831. He was then in France and, inspired by "how gallant Pulaski had fallen at the siege of Savannah during the Revolutionary struggle of 1776," traveled to Warsaw as a field surgeon for the Polish infantry.

The United States never initiated the creation of a military force for supporting Poland. Financial support and gifts were sent from the United States to the American-Polish Committee in France, which intended to purchase supplies and transport aid to Poland. The American writer James Fenimore Cooper wrote an appeal for the organization at the height of his popularity and motivated a nationwide collection for Poland in American cities. The Frenchman General Lafayette was an outspoken voice in France and urged for a French intervention to aid Poland in its independence from Russia. The French government sought to make peace with the Russian Empire and generally stayed out of the conflict.[6]

Following the collapse of the insurrection, American newspapers continued to publish news from British and French sources documenting oppression of Poles by the Russian and German Empires. Newspaper editors made mention of the Russians as "brutal" and "evil," and the Poles were "gallant" and "heroic" in their efforts. The American public was apprised of the ongoing suppression of the Polish Catholic Church and the conscription of Poles into the Imperial Russian Army, which hurt Russian-American relations. An American writer in Boston, Robin Carver, wrote a children's book in 1831, Stories of Poland, which said that for Polish children, "Their houses are not peaceful and happy homes, but are open to the spies and soldiers of a cruel and revengeful government.... There is no confidence, no repose, no hope for them, and will not be, till, by some more fortunate struggle, they shall drive the Russians from their borders, and become an independent people."[7] Poetic tributes to Poland were written in America, and literature denouncing the Russian treatment towards Poland continued after the Uprising. Russian Emperor Nicholas I and his emissaries asked the US Secretary of State for a formal rebuke of American newspapers reporting the mistreatment of Poles. US Secretary of State Edward Livingston chose to wait two months before responding to Russia's demands, but the US ambassador to Russia, James Buchanan, made promises to the Russians that the American press would circulate evidence that Russian cruelty had been "much overplayed." The historian Jerzy Jan Lerski was critical of Buchanan's pro-Russian stance on the Polish issue and said that he made statements on Poland without visiting the country or "listening to Polish testimony."[8]

Lincoln and Civil War edit

Poland's independence lost favour among American intellectuals during the American Civil War. Historians have argued that US President Abraham Lincoln was sympathetic to the Poles but chose not to intervene in Europe's affairs out of fear that European powers would support the Confederate States. The historian Tom Delahaye pointed to 1863 as a critical breakdown in relations between the "Crimean Coalition" (Britain, France, and Austria) and Russia, with Poland's independence a key reason for conflict.[9] Russian sympathies were solidly in favor of the North, and Lincoln expressed a non-interventionist policy towards Russia's "Polish problem." By doing so, Lincoln alienated himself from the British and the French politics and came closer to Russia, which contributed to a balance of power in favor of the tsar.

Second Polish Republic edit

 
The US embassy in Warsaw with shattered windows after the German bombing during the invasion of Poland in September 1939. Original colour photo by Julien Bryan.

On 8 January 1918, US President Woodrow Wilson issued his war aims, the Fourteen Points. Point 13 called for independent Poland with access to the sea: "An independent Polish state should be erected which should include the territories inhabited by indisputably Polish populations, which should be assured a free and secure access to the sea, and whose political and economic independence and territorial integrity should be guaranteed by international covenant." On January 22, 1919, US Secretary of State Robert Lansing notified Polish Prime Minister and Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Ignacy Jan Paderewski that the US had recognized the Provisional Polish Government.

At the Paris peace conference between January–June 1919, point 13 with its reference to Poland having "free and secure access to the sea" was the source of much dispute.[10] At the peace conference, Wilson stated what he meant by point 13 was the German city of Danzig (modern Gdańsk, Poland) should go to Poland.[11] Danzig was a deep water port located where the Vistula river flows into the Baltic sea, making the city the principle point where both imports and exports went into and out of Poland. The Polish delegation at the Paris peace conference led by Roman Dmowski argued that allowing Danzig to remain with Germany would give the Reich economic control of Poland and that for Poland to be truly independent required that Danzig go to Poland.[12] Alongside Wilson, the French Premier Georges Clemenceau supported the Polish claim to Danzig, but the British prime minister David Lloyd George was opposed, arguing that because the population of Danzig was about 90% German that ceding the city to Poland would violate the right to national self-determination.[11] In a compromise that pleased no-one, under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, Danzig was severed from Germany to become the Free City of Danzig, a city-state in which Poland had certain special rights.[13] Wilson argued that he maintained his promise made in point 13 to give Poland "free and secure access to the sea" while respected the wishes of the German population of Danzig not to be forced into Poland by accepting the compromise of the Free City of Danzig.[13]

The United States established diplomatic relations with the newly-formed Polish Republic in April 1919 but the relations between the two countries were distant though positive because of United States non-interventionism and Poland being seen as unimportant for US interests.

Eventually, both countries were part of the Allies during World War II, but there was relatively little need for detailed coordination between the US and the Polish government-in-exile, which was based in London.

Communist Poland edit

 
Edward Gierek, First Secretary and leader of the communist Polish People's Republic, waving from the balcony of the White House in Washington, DC, in 1974. To the right is President Gerald Ford.

On July 5, 1945, the US government recognized the communist government installed in Warsaw, thus abandoning the Polish government-in-exile. After 1950, Poland, which became the Polish People's Republic since 1952, became a member of the Eastern Bloc and opposed America during the Cold War. The first US ambassador to postwar Poland, Arthur Bliss Lane, wrote a book I Saw Poland Betrayed about how the Western Allies had abandoned their former ally, Poland, to Soviet influence. However, the Polish people and government maintained very close and warm ties with the Western Bloc and the United States.

In September 1946, the American secretary of state James F. Byrnes gave a speech in Stuttgart where in an attempt to appeal to German opinion stated that the Oder–Neisse line was only temporary and that some of the areas recently annexed to Poland might be returned to Germany at a late date.[14] Through Byrnes did not in fact call for Germany to regain its lost lands east of the Oder-Neisse line, the implication of the Stuttgart speech that it might caused much anger in Poland.[15] Byrnes's speech was described as having a "devastating" impact on those Poles who looked towards the United States as an ally.[16]

After Gomułka's arrival to power in 1956, relations with the United States improved considerably. In 1957, the Eisenhower administration as part of a gambit to force the European members of NATO to spend more on defense (a chronic American complaint) suggested in public that the United States would provide West Germany with nuclear weapons if the other NATO did not increase their defense spending.[17] In Warsaw, the American suggestion caused much fear as it was believed that a nuclear-armed West Germany would inevitably use its nuclear weapons to take back the lands east of the Oder-Neisse line.[18] To end this possibility, the Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki devised the Rapacki plan under which Poland, Czechoslovakia, East Germany and West Germany would all be a nuclear weapons free zone alongside a ban on missiles capable of firing nuclear weapons.[18] From the Polish viewpoint, the Rapacki plan had the additional benefit of keeping Soviet nuclear weapons and missiles out of Poland, which would thus end the possibility of American nuclear strikes to destroy them, which in turn would limit the amount of nuclear fall-out on Poland in the event of World War Three. In a speech at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on 2 October 1957, Rapacki formally presented his plan, which he argued would protect the peace of Europe.[19] The plan was rejected by the United States under the grounds that it would weaken NATO by keeping nuclear weapons out of West Germany, through in private Eisenhower thought there was merit to Rapacki's desire to prevent German reunification.[20]

During the Vietnam war, Poland was one of the three powers along with Canada and India that formed the International Control Commission (ICC) that supervised the Geneva Accords, and as such Polish diplomats were often involved in plans to end the Vietnam war. The Polish delegation to the ICC were allowed to tour both Vietnams and were in contact with the leaders in both Hanoi and Saigon, making them ideal intermediaries. When Rapacki visited New Delhi in January 1963, the American ambassador to India, John Kenneth Galbraith met with him to declare his "despair" about the Kennedy administration's policies in Vietnam and asked for his good offers to have Poland as an ICC member assist with finding a diplomatic solution to the Vietnam war.[21] Galbratih remained in regular contact with Przemysław Ogrodziński, the Polish ambassador to India, in seeking a diplomatic solution to the war.[22] Latre in 1963, the Polish Commissioner to the ICC, Mieczysław Maneli, was involved in the so-called "Maneli affair", a plan to end the Vietnam war by creating a federation of the two Vietnams.[23] In 1966, the Polish diplomat Janusz Lewandowski who served as the Polish commissioner to the ICC played a key role in Operation Marigold, an attempt to broker an end to the Vietnam war.[24] Lewandowski met in Saigon with Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., the American ambassador to South Vietnam, to present a plan for a "bombing pause" of North Vietnam as way to begin peace talks.[24]

In the 1960s, Gomułka's unwillingness to break with the Soviet Union and the negative attitude toward Israel during the Six-Day War caused those relations to stagnate. Polish-American relations improved once more after Edward Gierek had succeeded Gomułka. A consular agreement was signed under in 1972. In 1974, Gierek was the first Polish communist head of state to visit the United States. That action, among others, demonstrated that both sides wished to facilitate better relations.

The birth of Solidarity in 1980 raised the hope that progress would be made in Poland's external relations as well as in its domestic development. The United States provided $765 million in agricultural assistance and loans. Human rights and individual freedom issues, however, were not improved, and the US revoked Poland's most-favored-nation (MFN) status in response to the decision to ban on the Solidarity movement in 1981 and to instigate martial law by the communist Polish United Workers' Party. MFN status was reinstated in 1987.

 
Gierek and President Jimmy Carter, 1977

The Reagan administration engaged in clandestine support for Solidarity, and CIA money was channeled through third parties.[25] CIA officers were barred from meeting Solidarity leaders, and their contacts with Solidarnosc activists were weaker than those of the AFL–CIO, which raised $300,000 from its members to provide material and cash directly to Solidarity. The US Congress authorized the National Endowment for Democracy to promote democracy, and it allocated $10 million to Solidarity.[26] CIA support for Solidarity besides money included equipment and training, which was co-ordinated by the Special Operations division of the CIA.[27] Henry Hyde, a member of the US House Intelligence Committee, stated that the US provided "supplies and technical assistance in terms of clandestine newspapers, broadcasting, propaganda, money, organizational help and advice."[28] Michael Reisman from Yale Law School named operations in Poland as one of the covert actions of CIA during Cold War.[29] Initial funds for covert actions by the CIA were $2 million, but soon, authorizations were increased, and by 1985, the CIA had successfully infiltrated Poland.[30]

When the Polish government launched a crackdown of its own in December 1981, however, Solidarity was not alerted. Potential explanations for that vary; some believe that the CIA was caught off guard, but others suggest that American policymakers viewed an internal crackdown as preferable to an "inevitable Soviet intervention."[31]

Third Polish Republic edit

 
Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki with George H. W. Bush in White House, 1990

The United States and Poland have enjoyed warm bilateral relations since 1989. Every post-1989 Polish government has been a strong supporter of continued American military and economic presence in Europe, and Poland is one of the most stable allies of the United States.

When Poland joined NATO on March 12, 1999 the two countries became part of the same military alliance. As well as supporting the Global War on Terror, Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, and coalition efforts in Iraq (where the Polish contingent was one of the largest), Poland co-operates closely with the United States on such issues as democratization, nuclear proliferation, human rights, regional co-operation in Central and Eastern Europe, and reform of the United Nations.

 
Monument for Polish victims of the September 11 attacks at Skaryszew Park, Warsaw.

On 11 September 2001, 6 Polish citizens perished at the World Trade Center in New York City during the September 11 attacks. The monument for Polish 9/11 victims at Skaryszew Park in Warsaw was unveiled by Polish President Aleksander Kwaśniewski on 11 September 2002, the 1st anniversary of the attacks.[32][33]

In 2004, the Polish diplomat Piotr Ogrodziński stated: "This is a country that thinks seriously about its security. There's no doubt that for such a country, it's good to be a close ally of the United States".[34] In 2004, Ogrodziński spoke to the American media his concerns over what he felt was a lack of American gratitude for Poland's contribution to the Iraq war while denying Poles visa free travel to the United States, saying: "It's very hard to explain why one Polish kid is risking his life in Iraq and another kid is being stopped at the U.S. border because he happened to land in the wrong city".[35]

 
US President Barack Obama at a bilateral meeting in Warsaw with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, July 2011

US President Barack Obama visited Poland on 27–28 May 2011 and met with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and President Bronisław Komorowski. The American and Polish leaders discussed economic, military and technology cooperation issues.

In July 2017, Donald Trump in his second foreign travel visited Poland. He met with Polish President Andrzej Duda. Both then held a joint press conference in the Royal Castle, Warsaw. Trump thanked the Polish people and Duda for the warm welcome that he had received in Warsaw:[36] "Our strong alliance with Poland and NATO remains critical to deterring conflict and ensuring that war between great powers never again ravages Europe, and that the world will be a safer and better place. America is committed to maintaining peace and security in Central and Eastern Europe."[36]

President Trump also spoke with European leaders attending the Three Seas Initiative Summit in Warsaw."[36]

In 2018, Poland proposed for the United States open a permanent military base within its country. The Polish government would finance around $2 billion of the cost of hosting American forces, if the proposal was accepted by the United States. Poland has proposed Bydgoszcz or Toruń as potential base locations.[37] Since 1999, Poland has sought closer military ties with the United States.[38] In an apparent attempt to win favor, it was suggested by President Andrzej Duda in 2018 that the proposed American military base in Poland be named "Fort Trump", a choice of name that provoked controversy with many Poles charging that Duda was trying too hard to flatter Trump.[39] Opinion within the Pentagon was divided about the merits of permanently stationing an U.S. Army armored division in Poland as the Polish government wanted.[39] Some U.S. Army generals charged that it would strain U.S. Army resources too far and that the proposed location of "Fort Trump" was too exposed to Russian rockets.[39] Other generals argued that having an armored division stationed in Poland was preferable to the current system of rotation as it would allow the troops to get to know the country better.[39] In June 2019, both sides agreed to send 1,000 US troops to Poland.[40] In September 2019, six locations were determined to host approximately 4,500 from the US military in Poland, including: Poznań, Drawsko Pomorskie, Strachowice, Łask, Powidz and Lubliniec.[41]

On 24 June 2020, Trump said at a press conference with Duda that the United States plans to move some US troops from Germany to Poland.[42][43] Trump said, "Poland is one of the few countries that are fulfilling their obligations under NATO — in particular, their monetary obligations — and they asked us if we would send some additional troops.... I think [putting more US troops in Poland] sends a very strong signal to Russia."[44]

 
US President Joe Biden meeting with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki in Warsaw, February 2023

Duda was very close to Trump, which led to strained ties in 2021 under the new administration of Joe Biden.[45] In addition, the perception that the conservative PiS government was undermining the rule of law and its hostility towards gay rights made for difficult American-Polish relations.[45] Liberal American opinion tends to be supportive of gay rights and the practice of several Polish regional governments declaring themselves to be "LGBT-free zones" has led to criticism in the United States.[46] Joe Biden in a 2020 statement declared that the "LGBT-free zones" in Poland “have no place in the European Union or anywhere in the world."[46] In an implicit criticism of the PiS government, on 30 June 2021 the American embassy in Warsaw released a Polish language internet video supportive of gay rights, a move that was condemned by some Poles as interference in Poland's internal affairs.[47] The American charge d'affaires at the Warsaw embassy, Bix Aliu, stated that the video was about anti-gay comments being made on social media.[47]

The Russian aggression against Ukraine with the invasion launched on 24 February 2022 led to the Biden administration doing an U-turn on Poland, which was now embraced as a close ally.[45] Alina Polyakova, president of the Washington-based Center for European Policy Analysis stated in March 2022: "Given the situation, the administration is clearly prioritizing defense and security in the relationship. Poland is the indispensable ally for European security. Other issues and concerns have just taken a back seat. When push comes to shove, and there is a direct military threat to NATO, we need Poland. It doesn’t mean that all is forgiven, but it makes it very clear where the priorities are.”[45] Biden visited Warsaw in March 2022 in a show of support for a frontline NATO state.[45]

Issues edit

Radosław Sikorski edit

 
Foreign Minister Sikorski meets US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, February 2009

Despite their apparently close relationship, Wprost (a Polish magazine) obtained a recording of Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski calling the Polish-American alliance "downright harmful" and causing a "false sense of security."[48] while in a poll made in 2016, around 20% of questioned considered Americans a potential threat to Polish national security. Despite that, also in this poll, more than 50% of questioned considered Americans and Canadians as trustworthy.[49]

US missile defense complex in Poland edit

The US missile defense complex in Poland was part of the Ballistic Missile Defense European Capability of the US, to be placed in Redzikowo, Słupsk, Poland, forming a Ground-Based Midcourse Defense system in conjunction with a US narrow-beam midcourse tracking and discrimination radar system in the Brdy, Czech Republic. The plan was cancelled in 2009.

Polish society was divided on the issue. According to a poll by SMG/KRC released by TVP 50 per cent of respondents rejected the deployment of the shield on Polish soil, while 36 per cent supported it.[50]

In October 2009, with a trip by Vice President Joe Biden to Warsaw, a new, smaller interceptor project on roughly the same schedule as the Bush administration plan, was introduced, and welcomed by Prime Minister Donald Tusk.[51]

"Polish death camps" edit

In May 2012, during Medal of Freedom Ceremony, US President Obama referred to the concentration camps run by Nazis in Poland during World War II as "Polish death camps," a term that Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said showed "ignorance, lack of knowledge and ill will." Calling them "Polish death camps", Tusk said, implied that Poland was responsible and that "there had been no Nazis, no German responsibility, no Hitler."[52] After a White House spokesman issued a regret of misstatement by clarifying that the President was referring to the Nazi death camps, Tusk expressed an expectation of "a reaction more inclined to eliminate once and for all these kinds of errors."[53]

"2021 Polish Media Law" edit

Lex TVN is a controversial 2021 Polish media law which modifies the Polish Broadcasting Act. It forbids companies except those from the European Economic Area from holding more than a 49% stake in Polish radio and television stations.[54][55][56][57]

The ruling Law and Justice party argued that the bill would protect Polish broadcasters from takeovers by companies based in hostile foreign powers such as China and Russia. However, opposition, as well as representatives from European Union and the United States criticized it as it would force American company Discovery to divert itself from the biggest television network in Poland, TVN, which has been often critical of the PiS-led government; Polish opposition and some international observers expressed fear that the law is threatening press freedom in Poland.[54][58][59][60][61] The law has been criticized for "threatening the largest ever US investment in Poland".[54]

Images edit

High-level mutual visits edit

Guest Host Place of visit Date of visit
  Prime Minister Władysław Sikorski   President Franklin D. Roosevelt Washington, D.C., New York City, Palm Beach, and Chicago April 6–10, 1941 (1941-04-06 – 1941-04-10)
Washington, D.C., New York City March 23–30, 1941 (1941-03-23 – 1941-03-30)
December 2–3, 1942 (1942-12-02 – 1942-12-03)
January 1–5, 1943 (1943-01-01 – 1943-01-05)
  Prime Minister Stanisław Mikołajczyk Washington, D.C. June 5–14, 1944 (1944-06-05 – 1944-06-14)
  President Richard Nixon   First Secretary Edward Gierek Warsaw May 31 – June 1, 1972 (1972-05-31 – 1972-06-01)
  First Secretary Edward Gierek   President Gerald Ford Washington, D.C., Williamsburg, New York City, Pennsylvania, and Texas October 6–13, 1974 (1974-10-06 – 1974-10-13)
  President Gerald Ford   First Secretary Edward Gierek Warsaw, Kraków July 26–28, 1975 (1975-07-26 – 1975-07-28)
  President Jimmy Carter Warsaw December 29–31, 1977 (1977-12-29 – 1977-12-31)
  President George H. W. Bush   First Secretary Wojciech Jaruzelski
  Prime Minister Mieczysław Rakowski
Warsaw, Gdańsk July 9–11, 1989 (1989-07-09 – 1989-07-11)
  Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki   President George H. W. Bush Washington, D.C., Chicago May 20–23, 1990 (1990-05-20 – 1990-05-23)
New York City September 29, 1990
  President Lech Wałęsa Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York City March 19–22, 1991 (1991-03-19 – 1991-03-22)
  Prime Minister Jan Krzysztof Bielecki Washington, D.C. September 11, 1991
  Prime Minister Jan Olszewski April 13–14, 1992 (1992-04-13 – 1992-04-14)
  President George H. W. Bush   President Lech Wałęsa Warsaw July 5, 1992
  President Lech Wałęsa   President Bill Clinton Washington, D.C. April 20–22, 1993 (1993-04-20 – 1993-04-22)
  President Bill Clinton   President Lech Wałęsa
  Prime Minister Waldemar Pawlak
Warsaw July 6–7, 1994 (1994-07-06 – 1994-07-07)
  President Aleksander Kwaśniewski   President Bill Clinton Washington, D.C. July 9–10, 1996 (1996-07-09 – 1996-07-10)
  President Bill Clinton   President Aleksander Kwaśniewski
  Prime Minister Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz
Warsaw July 10–11, 1997 (1997-07-10 – 1997-07-11)
  Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek   President Bill Clinton Washington, D.C. July 8–10, 1998 (1998-07-08 – 1998-07-10)
  President Aleksander Kwaśniewski
  Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek
April 23–25, 1999 (1999-04-23 – 1999-04-25)
  President George W. Bush   President Aleksander Kwaśniewski
  Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek
Warsaw June 15–16, 2001 (2001-06-15 – 2001-06-16)
  Prime Minister Leszek Miller   President George W. Bush Washington, D.C. January 10–11, 2002 (2002-01-10 – 2002-01-11)
  President Aleksander Kwaśniewski Washington, D.C., Troy July 17–18, 2002 (2002-07-17 – 2002-07-18)
Washington, D.C. January 12–14, 2003 (2003-01-12 – 2003-01-14)
  Prime Minister Leszek Miller Washington, D.C. February 4–7, 2003 (2003-02-04 – 2003-02-07)
  President George W. Bush   President Aleksander Kwaśniewski
  Prime Minister Leszek Miller
Kraków, Auschwitz-Birkenau May 30–31, 2003 (2003-05-30 – 2003-05-31)
  President Aleksander Kwaśniewski   President George W. Bush Washington, D.C. January 26–27, 2004 (2004-01-26 – 2004-01-27)
  Prime Minister Marek Belka August 6–7, 2004 (2004-08-06 – 2004-08-07)
  President Aleksander Kwaśniewski February 8–9, 2005 (2005-02-08 – 2005-02-09)
October 12, 2005
  President Lech Kaczyński February 8–10, 2006 (2006-02-08 – 2006-02-10)
  President George W. Bush   President Lech Kaczyński
Gdańsk, Jurata June 8, 2007
  President Lech Kaczyński
  Prime Minister Jarosław Kaczyński
  President George W. Bush Washington, D.C. July 15–17, 2007 (2007-07-15 – 2007-07-17)
  Prime Minister Donald Tusk   President George W. Bush Washington, D.C. March 9–10, 2008 (2008-03-09 – 2008-03-10)
  President Bronisław Komorowski   President Barack Obama December 8, 2010
  President Barack Obama   President Bronisław Komorowski
  Prime Minister Donald Tusk
Warsaw May 27–28, 2011 (2011-05-27 – 2011-05-28)
  President Bronisław Komorowski   President Barack Obama Chicago May 20–21, 2012 (2012-05-20 – 2012-05-21)
  President Barack Obama   President Bronisław Komorowski
  Prime Minister Donald Tusk
Warsaw June 3–4, 2014 (2014-06-03 – 2014-06-04)
  President Andrzej Duda   President Barack Obama Washington, D.C. March 31 – April 1, 2016 (2016-03-31 – 2016-04-01)
  President Barack Obama   President Andrzej Duda Warsaw July 7–9, 2016 (2016-07-07 – 2016-07-09)
  President Donald Trump July 5–6, 2017 (2017-07-05 – 2017-07-06)
  President Andrzej Duda   President Donald Trump Washington, D.C. September 18, 2018
  Vice President Mike Pence   President Andrzej Duda
  Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki
Warsaw February 13–14, 2019 (2019-02-13 – 2019-02-14)
  Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki   President Donald Trump Washington, D.C. April 17–19, 2019 (2019-04-17 – 2019-04-19)
  President Andrzej Duda June 12, 2019
June 24, 2020
  Vice President Kamala Harris   President Andrzej Duda
  Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki
Warsaw March 10, 2022
  President Joe Biden Warsaw, Rzeszów March 26–27, 2022 (2022-03-26 – 2022-03-27)
  President Joe Biden Warsaw February 21–22, 2023 (2023-02-21 – 2023-02-22)
  Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki   Vice President Kamala Harris Washington, D.C. April 11–13, 2023 (2023-04-11 – 2023-04-13)

Resident diplomatic missions edit


See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "U.S. Relations With Poland".
  2. ^ Opinion of the United States - Poland Pew Research Center
  3. ^ U.S. Global Leadership Project Report - 2012 Gallup
  4. ^ 2013 World Service Poll BBC
  5. ^ #Jerzy Jan Lerski p. 26
  6. ^ #Jerzy Jan Lerski p. 7.
  7. ^ Stories of Poland. p. 141-142.
  8. ^ #Jerzy Jan Lerski p. 32.
  9. ^ "The Bilateral Effect of the Visit of the Russian Fleet in 1863". people.loyno.edu.
  10. ^ MacMillan 2001, p. 207.
  11. ^ a b Rothwell 2001, p. 106-107.
  12. ^ MacMillan 2001, p. 211.
  13. ^ a b MacMillan 2001, p. 218.
  14. ^ Allen 2003, p. 50.
  15. ^ Allen 2003, p. 51-52.
  16. ^ Allen 2003, p. 52.
  17. ^ Anderson 2010, p. 99.
  18. ^ a b Anderson 2010, p. 99-100.
  19. ^ Tudda 2020, p. 1361-1362.
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  1. Janusz Reiter, The Visa Barrier, Washington Post, August 29, 2007

Further reading edit

  • Allen, Debra J. (2003). The Oder-Neisse Line The United States, Poland, and Germany in the Cold War. New York: Praeger. ISBN 9780313323591.
  • Anderson, Sheldon (2010). "The German Question and Polish-East German Relations, 1945-1962". In Tobias Hochscherf; Christoph Laucht; Andrew Plowman (eds.). Divided, But Not Disconnected: German Experiences of the Cold War. Oxford: Berghahn Books. pp. 99–104. ISBN 978-1845456467.
  • Biskupski, M.B.B. The United States and the Rebirth of Poland, 1914-1918 (2012)
  • Biskupski, M.B.B. "Poland in American Foreign Policy, 1918-1945: "Sentimental" or "Strategic" Friendship?: A Review Article," Polish American Studies (1981) 38#2 pp. 5-15 in JSTOR
  • Blejwas, Stanislaus A. "Puritans and Poles: The New England Literary Image of the Polish Peasant Immigrant." Polish American Studies (1985): 46–88. in JSTOR
  • Cienciala, Anna M. "The United States and Poland in World War II." The Polish Review (2009): 173–194.
  • Daoudi, M.S. and M. S. Dajani, "Poland: The Politactics of Sanctions." The Polish Review (1985): 149-166 online.
  • Feis, Herbert. Churchill Roosevelt Stalin The War They Waged and the Peace They Sought A Diplomatic History of World War II (1957) ch 2, 7, 21, 29, 39–40, 54, 60; very detailed coverage
  • Gnoinska, Margaret (March 2005). "Poland and Vietnam, 1963: New Evidence on Secret Communist Diplomacy and the "Maneli Affair"". Cold War International History Project Working Paper 45: 2–83..
  • Karnow, Stanley (1983). Vietnam: A History. New York: Viking. ISBN 0670746045.
  • Jaroszyźska-Kirchmann, Anna D. The Exile Mission: The Polish Political Diaspora and Political America, 1939–1956 (Ohio University Press, 2004).
  • Jones, J. Sydney. "Polish Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 3, Gale, 2014), pp. 477–492. online
  • Jones, Seth G. A Covert Action: Reagan, the CIA, and the Cold War Struggle in Poland (WW Norton, 2018).
  • Kantorosinski, Zbigniew. Emblem of Good Will: a Polish Declaration of Admiration and Friendship for the United States of America. Washington, DC: Library of Congress (1997)
  • Lipoński, Wojciech. "Anti-American Propaganda in Poland From 1948 to 1954: A Story of An Ideological Failure." American Studies International (1990): 80–92. in JSTOR
  • MacMillan, Margaret (2001). Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World. New York: Randhom House. ISBN 9780375760525.
  • McGinley, Theresa Kurk. "Embattled Polonia, Polish-Americans and World War II." East European Quarterly (2003) 37#3 pp 325–344.
  • Manijak, William. "Polish American Pressure Groups, Woodrow Wilson and the Thirteenth Point: The Significance of Polish Food Relief, the Polish Vote in the 1916 Presidential Election, and European Events in the Eventual Self-Determination for Poland" (PhD dissertation, Ball State University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1975. 7616969).
  • Mastny, Vojtech. "The Soviet Non-invasion of Poland in 1980-1981 and the End of the Cold War." Europe-Asia Studies 1999 51(2): 189-211. online
  • Michalski, Artur. Poland’s Relations with the United States, Yearbook of Polish Foreign Policy (01/2005), CEEOL - Obsolete Link
  • Pacy, James S. "Polish Ambassadors and Ministers in Rome, Tokyo, and Washington, DC 1920-1945: Part II." The Polish Review (1985): 381–395.
  • Halina Parafianowicz, Herbert C. Hoover and Poland: 1919–1933. Between Myth and Reality. in: Great Power Policies Towards Central Europe, 1914–1945. Bristol: e-International Relations, 2019: pp. 176–198. 1945 online free
  • Pease, Neal. Poland, the United States, and the Stabilization of Europe, 1919-1933 (1986) excerpts
  • Pienkos, Donald E. "Of Patriots and Presidents: America's Polish Diaspora and U.S. Foreign Policy Since 1917," Polish American Studies (2011) 68#1 pp. 5–17 in JSTOR
  • Rothwell, Victor (2001). The Origins of the Second World War. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719059582.
  • Sjursen, Helene. The United States, Western Europe and the Polish Crisis: International Relations in the Second Cold War (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003)
  • Tudda, Christ (2020). "The Rapacki Plan". In Stephen Tucker (ed.). The Cold War: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection. Santa Monica: ABC-CLIO. pp. 1361–1362. ISBN 9781440860768.
  • Tyszkiewicz, Jakub. “Human Rights and the Jimmy Carter Administration’s Policy towards Poland, 1977-80.” Cold War History 23:2 (2023): 307-325. DOI 10.1080/14682745.2022.2102606 online discussion of this article
  • Vaughan, Patrick G. “Beyond Benign Neglect: Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Polish Crisis of 1980,” The Polish Review 64#1 (1999): 3-28, online
  • Walt, Stephen (2011). "Alliances in an unipolar world". In G. John Ikenberry; Michael Mastanduno; William C. Wohlforth (eds.). International Relations Theory and the Consequences of Unipolarity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 99–139. ISBN 978-1139501644.
  • Wandycz, Piotr S. The United States and Poland (1980)

External links edit

  • History of Poland - U.S. relations
  • Kosciuszko Foundation Online Programs "A REALLY BIG BIRTHDAY CARD'' Recovering a Polish and American Treasure

poland, united, states, relations, official, relations, between, poland, united, states, diplomatic, level, were, initiated, 1919, after, poland, established, itself, republic, after, years, being, under, foreign, rule, from, partitions, poland, however, ties,. Official relations between Poland and the United States on a diplomatic level were initiated in 1919 after Poland had established itself as a republic after 123 years of being under foreign rule from the Partitions of Poland However ties with the United States date back to the 17th century when the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth was one of Europe s largest powers and many Poles immigrated to the Thirteen Colonies During the American Revolutionary War the Polish military commanders Tadeusz Kosciuszko and Casimir Pulaski contributed greatly to the Patriot cause with Kosciuszko becoming a national hero in America Since 1989 Polish American relations have been strong and Poland is one of the chief European allies of the United States being part of both NATO and the European Union There is a strong cultural appreciation between the two nations Polonophilia According to the US Department of State Poland remains a stalwart ally and one of strongest Continental partners in fostering security and prosperity throughout Europe and the world 1 Poland was also one of four participating countries in the American led Iraq War coalition in 2003 Polish American relationsPoland United StatesDiplomatic missionPolish Embassy Washington D C United States Embassy WarsawEnvoyAmbassador Marek MagierowskiAmbassador Mark BrzezinskiIn addition to close historical ties Poland is one of the most consistently pro American nations in Europe and the world with 79 of Poles viewing the US favorably in 2002 and 67 in 2013 2 According to the 2012 US Global Leadership Report 36 of Poles approve of American leadership with 30 disapproving and 34 uncertain 3 and in a 2013 BBC World Service Poll 55 of Poles view US influence positively the highest rating for any surveyed European country 4 Contents 1 Before 20th century 1 1 American response to November Uprising 1 2 Lincoln and Civil War 2 Second Polish Republic 3 Communist Poland 4 Third Polish Republic 5 Issues 5 1 Radoslaw Sikorski 5 2 US missile defense complex in Poland 5 3 Polish death camps 5 4 2021 Polish Media Law 6 Images 7 High level mutual visits 8 Resident diplomatic missions 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksBefore 20th century edit nbsp Kosciuszko statue in Lafayette Park Washington DCThe partitions of Poland erased Poland from the map in 1795 and long prevented the establishment of official diplomatic relations between Poland and the new United States However Poland which enacted the world s second oldest constitution in 1791 always considered the United States a positive influence Even in the 18th century important Polish figures such as Tadeusz Kosciuszko and Casimir Pulaski became closely involved with shaping US history Haym Salomon a Polish Jew was the prime financier of the American side during the American Revolutionary War against Great Britain Many Poles also emigrated to the United States in the 19th century and formed a large Polish American community in urban centres such as Chicago American response to November Uprising edit Main article November Uprising nbsp The American writer Edgar Allan Poe wished to join a possible Polish Army to fight off the partitioning powers Poland s November Uprising in 1831 and the fight for regaining independence from the neighbouring empires were extensively documented and editorialized in American newspapers As the historian Jerzy Jan Lerski described one could reproduce in detail virtually the whole story of the November Uprising from the 1831 files of American dailies published at that time regardless of the fact that they were usually four sheet affairs with little space left for foreign news 5 There were very few Poles in the United States at the time but views of Poland were shaped positively by its support for the American Revolution Several young men offered their military services to fight for Poland the most well known of which was Edgar Allan Poe who wrote a letter to his commanding officer March 10 1831 to join the Polish Army if it was created in France citation needed Support for Poland was highest in the South as Casimir Pulaski s death in Savannah Georgia was well remembered and memorialized An American surgeon Dr Paul Fitzsimmons from the Georgia actually joined the Polish Army in 1831 He was then in France and inspired by how gallant Pulaski had fallen at the siege of Savannah during the Revolutionary struggle of 1776 traveled to Warsaw as a field surgeon for the Polish infantry The United States never initiated the creation of a military force for supporting Poland Financial support and gifts were sent from the United States to the American Polish Committee in France which intended to purchase supplies and transport aid to Poland The American writer James Fenimore Cooper wrote an appeal for the organization at the height of his popularity and motivated a nationwide collection for Poland in American cities The Frenchman General Lafayette was an outspoken voice in France and urged for a French intervention to aid Poland in its independence from Russia The French government sought to make peace with the Russian Empire and generally stayed out of the conflict 6 Following the collapse of the insurrection American newspapers continued to publish news from British and French sources documenting oppression of Poles by the Russian and German Empires Newspaper editors made mention of the Russians as brutal and evil and the Poles were gallant and heroic in their efforts The American public was apprised of the ongoing suppression of the Polish Catholic Church and the conscription of Poles into the Imperial Russian Army which hurt Russian American relations An American writer in Boston Robin Carver wrote a children s book in 1831 Stories of Poland which said that for Polish children Their houses are not peaceful and happy homes but are open to the spies and soldiers of a cruel and revengeful government There is no confidence no repose no hope for them and will not be till by some more fortunate struggle they shall drive the Russians from their borders and become an independent people 7 Poetic tributes to Poland were written in America and literature denouncing the Russian treatment towards Poland continued after the Uprising Russian Emperor Nicholas I and his emissaries asked the US Secretary of State for a formal rebuke of American newspapers reporting the mistreatment of Poles US Secretary of State Edward Livingston chose to wait two months before responding to Russia s demands but the US ambassador to Russia James Buchanan made promises to the Russians that the American press would circulate evidence that Russian cruelty had been much overplayed The historian Jerzy Jan Lerski was critical of Buchanan s pro Russian stance on the Polish issue and said that he made statements on Poland without visiting the country or listening to Polish testimony 8 Lincoln and Civil War edit Poland s independence lost favour among American intellectuals during the American Civil War Historians have argued that US President Abraham Lincoln was sympathetic to the Poles but chose not to intervene in Europe s affairs out of fear that European powers would support the Confederate States The historian Tom Delahaye pointed to 1863 as a critical breakdown in relations between the Crimean Coalition Britain France and Austria and Russia with Poland s independence a key reason for conflict 9 Russian sympathies were solidly in favor of the North and Lincoln expressed a non interventionist policy towards Russia s Polish problem By doing so Lincoln alienated himself from the British and the French politics and came closer to Russia which contributed to a balance of power in favor of the tsar Second Polish Republic edit nbsp The US embassy in Warsaw with shattered windows after the German bombing during the invasion of Poland in September 1939 Original colour photo by Julien Bryan On 8 January 1918 US President Woodrow Wilson issued his war aims the Fourteen Points Point 13 called for independent Poland with access to the sea An independent Polish state should be erected which should include the territories inhabited by indisputably Polish populations which should be assured a free and secure access to the sea and whose political and economic independence and territorial integrity should be guaranteed by international covenant On January 22 1919 US Secretary of State Robert Lansing notified Polish Prime Minister and Secretary for Foreign Affairs Ignacy Jan Paderewski that the US had recognized the Provisional Polish Government At the Paris peace conference between January June 1919 point 13 with its reference to Poland having free and secure access to the sea was the source of much dispute 10 At the peace conference Wilson stated what he meant by point 13 was the German city of Danzig modern Gdansk Poland should go to Poland 11 Danzig was a deep water port located where the Vistula river flows into the Baltic sea making the city the principle point where both imports and exports went into and out of Poland The Polish delegation at the Paris peace conference led by Roman Dmowski argued that allowing Danzig to remain with Germany would give the Reich economic control of Poland and that for Poland to be truly independent required that Danzig go to Poland 12 Alongside Wilson the French Premier Georges Clemenceau supported the Polish claim to Danzig but the British prime minister David Lloyd George was opposed arguing that because the population of Danzig was about 90 German that ceding the city to Poland would violate the right to national self determination 11 In a compromise that pleased no one under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles Danzig was severed from Germany to become the Free City of Danzig a city state in which Poland had certain special rights 13 Wilson argued that he maintained his promise made in point 13 to give Poland free and secure access to the sea while respected the wishes of the German population of Danzig not to be forced into Poland by accepting the compromise of the Free City of Danzig 13 The United States established diplomatic relations with the newly formed Polish Republic in April 1919 but the relations between the two countries were distant though positive because of United States non interventionism and Poland being seen as unimportant for US interests Eventually both countries were part of the Allies during World War II but there was relatively little need for detailed coordination between the US and the Polish government in exile which was based in London Communist Poland edit nbsp Edward Gierek First Secretary and leader of the communist Polish People s Republic waving from the balcony of the White House in Washington DC in 1974 To the right is President Gerald Ford On July 5 1945 the US government recognized the communist government installed in Warsaw thus abandoning the Polish government in exile After 1950 Poland which became the Polish People s Republic since 1952 became a member of the Eastern Bloc and opposed America during the Cold War The first US ambassador to postwar Poland Arthur Bliss Lane wrote a book I Saw Poland Betrayed about how the Western Allies had abandoned their former ally Poland to Soviet influence However the Polish people and government maintained very close and warm ties with the Western Bloc and the United States In September 1946 the American secretary of state James F Byrnes gave a speech in Stuttgart where in an attempt to appeal to German opinion stated that the Oder Neisse line was only temporary and that some of the areas recently annexed to Poland might be returned to Germany at a late date 14 Through Byrnes did not in fact call for Germany to regain its lost lands east of the Oder Neisse line the implication of the Stuttgart speech that it might caused much anger in Poland 15 Byrnes s speech was described as having a devastating impact on those Poles who looked towards the United States as an ally 16 After Gomulka s arrival to power in 1956 relations with the United States improved considerably In 1957 the Eisenhower administration as part of a gambit to force the European members of NATO to spend more on defense a chronic American complaint suggested in public that the United States would provide West Germany with nuclear weapons if the other NATO did not increase their defense spending 17 In Warsaw the American suggestion caused much fear as it was believed that a nuclear armed West Germany would inevitably use its nuclear weapons to take back the lands east of the Oder Neisse line 18 To end this possibility the Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki devised the Rapacki plan under which Poland Czechoslovakia East Germany and West Germany would all be a nuclear weapons free zone alongside a ban on missiles capable of firing nuclear weapons 18 From the Polish viewpoint the Rapacki plan had the additional benefit of keeping Soviet nuclear weapons and missiles out of Poland which would thus end the possibility of American nuclear strikes to destroy them which in turn would limit the amount of nuclear fall out on Poland in the event of World War Three In a speech at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on 2 October 1957 Rapacki formally presented his plan which he argued would protect the peace of Europe 19 The plan was rejected by the United States under the grounds that it would weaken NATO by keeping nuclear weapons out of West Germany through in private Eisenhower thought there was merit to Rapacki s desire to prevent German reunification 20 During the Vietnam war Poland was one of the three powers along with Canada and India that formed the International Control Commission ICC that supervised the Geneva Accords and as such Polish diplomats were often involved in plans to end the Vietnam war The Polish delegation to the ICC were allowed to tour both Vietnams and were in contact with the leaders in both Hanoi and Saigon making them ideal intermediaries When Rapacki visited New Delhi in January 1963 the American ambassador to India John Kenneth Galbraith met with him to declare his despair about the Kennedy administration s policies in Vietnam and asked for his good offers to have Poland as an ICC member assist with finding a diplomatic solution to the Vietnam war 21 Galbratih remained in regular contact with Przemyslaw Ogrodzinski the Polish ambassador to India in seeking a diplomatic solution to the war 22 Latre in 1963 the Polish Commissioner to the ICC Mieczyslaw Maneli was involved in the so called Maneli affair a plan to end the Vietnam war by creating a federation of the two Vietnams 23 In 1966 the Polish diplomat Janusz Lewandowski who served as the Polish commissioner to the ICC played a key role in Operation Marigold an attempt to broker an end to the Vietnam war 24 Lewandowski met in Saigon with Henry Cabot Lodge Jr the American ambassador to South Vietnam to present a plan for a bombing pause of North Vietnam as way to begin peace talks 24 In the 1960s Gomulka s unwillingness to break with the Soviet Union and the negative attitude toward Israel during the Six Day War caused those relations to stagnate Polish American relations improved once more after Edward Gierek had succeeded Gomulka A consular agreement was signed under in 1972 In 1974 Gierek was the first Polish communist head of state to visit the United States That action among others demonstrated that both sides wished to facilitate better relations The birth of Solidarity in 1980 raised the hope that progress would be made in Poland s external relations as well as in its domestic development The United States provided 765 million in agricultural assistance and loans Human rights and individual freedom issues however were not improved and the US revoked Poland s most favored nation MFN status in response to the decision to ban on the Solidarity movement in 1981 and to instigate martial law by the communist Polish United Workers Party MFN status was reinstated in 1987 nbsp Gierek and President Jimmy Carter 1977The Reagan administration engaged in clandestine support for Solidarity and CIA money was channeled through third parties 25 CIA officers were barred from meeting Solidarity leaders and their contacts with Solidarnosc activists were weaker than those of the AFL CIO which raised 300 000 from its members to provide material and cash directly to Solidarity The US Congress authorized the National Endowment for Democracy to promote democracy and it allocated 10 million to Solidarity 26 CIA support for Solidarity besides money included equipment and training which was co ordinated by the Special Operations division of the CIA 27 Henry Hyde a member of the US House Intelligence Committee stated that the US provided supplies and technical assistance in terms of clandestine newspapers broadcasting propaganda money organizational help and advice 28 Michael Reisman from Yale Law School named operations in Poland as one of the covert actions of CIA during Cold War 29 Initial funds for covert actions by the CIA were 2 million but soon authorizations were increased and by 1985 the CIA had successfully infiltrated Poland 30 When the Polish government launched a crackdown of its own in December 1981 however Solidarity was not alerted Potential explanations for that vary some believe that the CIA was caught off guard but others suggest that American policymakers viewed an internal crackdown as preferable to an inevitable Soviet intervention 31 Third Polish Republic edit nbsp Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki with George H W Bush in White House 1990The United States and Poland have enjoyed warm bilateral relations since 1989 Every post 1989 Polish government has been a strong supporter of continued American military and economic presence in Europe and Poland is one of the most stable allies of the United States When Poland joined NATO on March 12 1999 the two countries became part of the same military alliance As well as supporting the Global War on Terror Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and coalition efforts in Iraq where the Polish contingent was one of the largest Poland co operates closely with the United States on such issues as democratization nuclear proliferation human rights regional co operation in Central and Eastern Europe and reform of the United Nations nbsp Monument for Polish victims of the September 11 attacks at Skaryszew Park Warsaw On 11 September 2001 6 Polish citizens perished at the World Trade Center in New York City during the September 11 attacks The monument for Polish 9 11 victims at Skaryszew Park in Warsaw was unveiled by Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski on 11 September 2002 the 1st anniversary of the attacks 32 33 In 2004 the Polish diplomat Piotr Ogrodzinski stated This is a country that thinks seriously about its security There s no doubt that for such a country it s good to be a close ally of the United States 34 In 2004 Ogrodzinski spoke to the American media his concerns over what he felt was a lack of American gratitude for Poland s contribution to the Iraq war while denying Poles visa free travel to the United States saying It s very hard to explain why one Polish kid is risking his life in Iraq and another kid is being stopped at the U S border because he happened to land in the wrong city 35 nbsp US President Barack Obama at a bilateral meeting in Warsaw with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk July 2011US President Barack Obama visited Poland on 27 28 May 2011 and met with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and President Bronislaw Komorowski The American and Polish leaders discussed economic military and technology cooperation issues In July 2017 Donald Trump in his second foreign travel visited Poland He met with Polish President Andrzej Duda Both then held a joint press conference in the Royal Castle Warsaw Trump thanked the Polish people and Duda for the warm welcome that he had received in Warsaw 36 Our strong alliance with Poland and NATO remains critical to deterring conflict and ensuring that war between great powers never again ravages Europe and that the world will be a safer and better place America is committed to maintaining peace and security in Central and Eastern Europe 36 President Trump also spoke with European leaders attending the Three Seas Initiative Summit in Warsaw 36 In 2018 Poland proposed for the United States open a permanent military base within its country The Polish government would finance around 2 billion of the cost of hosting American forces if the proposal was accepted by the United States Poland has proposed Bydgoszcz or Torun as potential base locations 37 Since 1999 Poland has sought closer military ties with the United States 38 In an apparent attempt to win favor it was suggested by President Andrzej Duda in 2018 that the proposed American military base in Poland be named Fort Trump a choice of name that provoked controversy with many Poles charging that Duda was trying too hard to flatter Trump 39 Opinion within the Pentagon was divided about the merits of permanently stationing an U S Army armored division in Poland as the Polish government wanted 39 Some U S Army generals charged that it would strain U S Army resources too far and that the proposed location of Fort Trump was too exposed to Russian rockets 39 Other generals argued that having an armored division stationed in Poland was preferable to the current system of rotation as it would allow the troops to get to know the country better 39 In June 2019 both sides agreed to send 1 000 US troops to Poland 40 In September 2019 six locations were determined to host approximately 4 500 from the US military in Poland including Poznan Drawsko Pomorskie Strachowice Lask Powidz and Lubliniec 41 On 24 June 2020 Trump said at a press conference with Duda that the United States plans to move some US troops from Germany to Poland 42 43 Trump said Poland is one of the few countries that are fulfilling their obligations under NATO in particular their monetary obligations and they asked us if we would send some additional troops I think putting more US troops in Poland sends a very strong signal to Russia 44 nbsp US President Joe Biden meeting with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki in Warsaw February 2023Duda was very close to Trump which led to strained ties in 2021 under the new administration of Joe Biden 45 In addition the perception that the conservative PiS government was undermining the rule of law and its hostility towards gay rights made for difficult American Polish relations 45 Liberal American opinion tends to be supportive of gay rights and the practice of several Polish regional governments declaring themselves to be LGBT free zones has led to criticism in the United States 46 Joe Biden in a 2020 statement declared that the LGBT free zones in Poland have no place in the European Union or anywhere in the world 46 In an implicit criticism of the PiS government on 30 June 2021 the American embassy in Warsaw released a Polish language internet video supportive of gay rights a move that was condemned by some Poles as interference in Poland s internal affairs 47 The American charge d affaires at the Warsaw embassy Bix Aliu stated that the video was about anti gay comments being made on social media 47 The Russian aggression against Ukraine with the invasion launched on 24 February 2022 led to the Biden administration doing an U turn on Poland which was now embraced as a close ally 45 Alina Polyakova president of the Washington based Center for European Policy Analysis stated in March 2022 Given the situation the administration is clearly prioritizing defense and security in the relationship Poland is the indispensable ally for European security Other issues and concerns have just taken a back seat When push comes to shove and there is a direct military threat to NATO we need Poland It doesn t mean that all is forgiven but it makes it very clear where the priorities are 45 Biden visited Warsaw in March 2022 in a show of support for a frontline NATO state 45 Issues editRadoslaw Sikorski edit nbsp Foreign Minister Sikorski meets US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton February 2009Despite their apparently close relationship Wprost a Polish magazine obtained a recording of Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski calling the Polish American alliance downright harmful and causing a false sense of security 48 while in a poll made in 2016 around 20 of questioned considered Americans a potential threat to Polish national security Despite that also in this poll more than 50 of questioned considered Americans and Canadians as trustworthy 49 US missile defense complex in Poland edit Main article United States missile defense complex in Poland The US missile defense complex in Poland was part of the Ballistic Missile Defense European Capability of the US to be placed in Redzikowo Slupsk Poland forming a Ground Based Midcourse Defense system in conjunction with a US narrow beam midcourse tracking and discrimination radar system in the Brdy Czech Republic The plan was cancelled in 2009 Polish society was divided on the issue According to a poll by SMG KRC released by TVP 50 per cent of respondents rejected the deployment of the shield on Polish soil while 36 per cent supported it 50 In October 2009 with a trip by Vice President Joe Biden to Warsaw a new smaller interceptor project on roughly the same schedule as the Bush administration plan was introduced and welcomed by Prime Minister Donald Tusk 51 Polish death camps edit In May 2012 during Medal of Freedom Ceremony US President Obama referred to the concentration camps run by Nazis in Poland during World War II as Polish death camps a term that Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said showed ignorance lack of knowledge and ill will Calling them Polish death camps Tusk said implied that Poland was responsible and that there had been no Nazis no German responsibility no Hitler 52 After a White House spokesman issued a regret of misstatement by clarifying that the President was referring to the Nazi death camps Tusk expressed an expectation of a reaction more inclined to eliminate once and for all these kinds of errors 53 2021 Polish Media Law edit Lex TVN is a controversial 2021 Polish media law which modifies the Polish Broadcasting Act It forbids companies except those from the European Economic Area from holding more than a 49 stake in Polish radio and television stations 54 55 56 57 The ruling Law and Justice party argued that the bill would protect Polish broadcasters from takeovers by companies based in hostile foreign powers such as China and Russia However opposition as well as representatives from European Union and the United States criticized it as it would force American company Discovery to divert itself from the biggest television network in Poland TVN which has been often critical of the PiS led government Polish opposition and some international observers expressed fear that the law is threatening press freedom in Poland 54 58 59 60 61 The law has been criticized for threatening the largest ever US investment in Poland 54 Images edit nbsp Poland was one of the countries overrun by Nazi Germany The country was recognized by the United States which issued the stamp in 1943 in Poland s honor nbsp Polish Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski during conversation with US President George W Bush in White House 2006 nbsp Prime Minister Donald Tusk meets with US President George W Bush February 2008 nbsp Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Witold Waszczykowski and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson 2017 nbsp Vice President Mike Pence and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki signed joint declaration on 5G 2019 nbsp Marshal Speaker of Sejm Elzbieta Witek with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi June 2022High level mutual visits editGuest Host Place of visit Date of visit nbsp Prime Minister Wladyslaw Sikorski nbsp President Franklin D Roosevelt Washington D C New York City Palm Beach and Chicago April 6 10 1941 1941 04 06 1941 04 10 Washington D C New York City March 23 30 1941 1941 03 23 1941 03 30 December 2 3 1942 1942 12 02 1942 12 03 January 1 5 1943 1943 01 01 1943 01 05 nbsp Prime Minister Stanislaw Mikolajczyk Washington D C June 5 14 1944 1944 06 05 1944 06 14 nbsp President Richard Nixon nbsp First Secretary Edward Gierek Warsaw May 31 June 1 1972 1972 05 31 1972 06 01 nbsp First Secretary Edward Gierek nbsp President Gerald Ford Washington D C Williamsburg New York City Pennsylvania and Texas October 6 13 1974 1974 10 06 1974 10 13 nbsp President Gerald Ford nbsp First Secretary Edward Gierek Warsaw Krakow July 26 28 1975 1975 07 26 1975 07 28 nbsp President Jimmy Carter Warsaw December 29 31 1977 1977 12 29 1977 12 31 nbsp President George H W Bush nbsp First Secretary Wojciech Jaruzelski nbsp Prime Minister Mieczyslaw Rakowski Warsaw Gdansk July 9 11 1989 1989 07 09 1989 07 11 nbsp Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki nbsp President George H W Bush Washington D C Chicago May 20 23 1990 1990 05 20 1990 05 23 New York City September 29 1990 nbsp President Lech Walesa Washington D C Los Angeles Chicago and New York City March 19 22 1991 1991 03 19 1991 03 22 nbsp Prime Minister Jan Krzysztof Bielecki Washington D C September 11 1991 nbsp Prime Minister Jan Olszewski April 13 14 1992 1992 04 13 1992 04 14 nbsp President George H W Bush nbsp President Lech Walesa Warsaw July 5 1992 nbsp President Lech Walesa nbsp President Bill Clinton Washington D C April 20 22 1993 1993 04 20 1993 04 22 nbsp President Bill Clinton nbsp President Lech Walesa nbsp Prime Minister Waldemar Pawlak Warsaw July 6 7 1994 1994 07 06 1994 07 07 nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski nbsp President Bill Clinton Washington D C July 9 10 1996 1996 07 09 1996 07 10 nbsp President Bill Clinton nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski nbsp Prime Minister Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz Warsaw July 10 11 1997 1997 07 10 1997 07 11 nbsp Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek nbsp President Bill Clinton Washington D C July 8 10 1998 1998 07 08 1998 07 10 nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski nbsp Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek April 23 25 1999 1999 04 23 1999 04 25 nbsp President George W Bush nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski nbsp Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek Warsaw June 15 16 2001 2001 06 15 2001 06 16 nbsp Prime Minister Leszek Miller nbsp President George W Bush Washington D C January 10 11 2002 2002 01 10 2002 01 11 nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski Washington D C Troy July 17 18 2002 2002 07 17 2002 07 18 Washington D C January 12 14 2003 2003 01 12 2003 01 14 nbsp Prime Minister Leszek Miller Washington D C February 4 7 2003 2003 02 04 2003 02 07 nbsp President George W Bush nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski nbsp Prime Minister Leszek Miller Krakow Auschwitz Birkenau May 30 31 2003 2003 05 30 2003 05 31 nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski nbsp President George W Bush Washington D C January 26 27 2004 2004 01 26 2004 01 27 nbsp Prime Minister Marek Belka August 6 7 2004 2004 08 06 2004 08 07 nbsp President Aleksander Kwasniewski February 8 9 2005 2005 02 08 2005 02 09 October 12 2005 nbsp President Lech Kaczynski February 8 10 2006 2006 02 08 2006 02 10 nbsp President George W Bush nbsp President Lech Kaczynski Gdansk Jurata June 8 2007 nbsp President Lech Kaczynski nbsp Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski nbsp President George W Bush Washington D C July 15 17 2007 2007 07 15 2007 07 17 nbsp Prime Minister Donald Tusk nbsp President George W Bush Washington D C March 9 10 2008 2008 03 09 2008 03 10 nbsp President Bronislaw Komorowski nbsp President Barack Obama December 8 2010 nbsp President Barack Obama nbsp President Bronislaw Komorowski nbsp Prime Minister Donald Tusk Warsaw May 27 28 2011 2011 05 27 2011 05 28 nbsp President Bronislaw Komorowski nbsp President Barack Obama Chicago May 20 21 2012 2012 05 20 2012 05 21 nbsp President Barack Obama nbsp President Bronislaw Komorowski nbsp Prime Minister Donald Tusk Warsaw June 3 4 2014 2014 06 03 2014 06 04 nbsp President Andrzej Duda nbsp President Barack Obama Washington D C March 31 April 1 2016 2016 03 31 2016 04 01 nbsp President Barack Obama nbsp President Andrzej Duda Warsaw July 7 9 2016 2016 07 07 2016 07 09 nbsp President Donald Trump July 5 6 2017 2017 07 05 2017 07 06 nbsp President Andrzej Duda nbsp President Donald Trump Washington D C September 18 2018 nbsp Vice President Mike Pence nbsp President Andrzej Duda nbsp Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki Warsaw February 13 14 2019 2019 02 13 2019 02 14 nbsp Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki nbsp President Donald Trump Washington D C April 17 19 2019 2019 04 17 2019 04 19 nbsp President Andrzej Duda June 12 2019June 24 2020 nbsp Vice President Kamala Harris nbsp President Andrzej Duda nbsp Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki Warsaw March 10 2022 nbsp President Joe Biden Warsaw Rzeszow March 26 27 2022 2022 03 26 2022 03 27 nbsp President Joe Biden Warsaw February 21 22 2023 2023 02 21 2023 02 22 nbsp Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki nbsp Vice President Kamala Harris Washington D C April 11 13 2023 2023 04 11 2023 04 13 Resident diplomatic missions editPoland has an embassy in Washington D C and consulates general in Chicago Houston Los Angeles and New York 62 United States has an embassy in Warsaw a consulate general in Krakow and a consular agency in Poznan 63 nbsp Embassy of Poland in Washington D C nbsp Consulate General of Poland in Chicago nbsp Consulate General of Poland in New York City nbsp Embassy of the United States in Warsaw nbsp Consulate General of the United States in Krakow nbsp Consular Agency of the United States in PoznanSee also edit nbsp Poland portal nbsp United States portalList of ambassadors of the United States to Poland Polish Americans List of Polish Americans Polish American vote Polish American Historical Association Polish American Congress Casimir Pulaski Day US EU relationsReferences edit U S Relations With Poland Opinion of the United States Poland Pew Research Center U S Global Leadership Project Report 2012 Gallup 2013 World Service Poll BBC Jerzy Jan Lerski p 26 Jerzy Jan Lerski p 7 Stories of Poland p 141 142 Jerzy Jan Lerski p 32 The Bilateral Effect of the Visit of the Russian Fleet in 1863 people loyno edu MacMillan 2001 p 207 a b Rothwell 2001 p 106 107 MacMillan 2001 p 211 a b MacMillan 2001 p 218 Allen 2003 p 50 Allen 2003 p 51 52 Allen 2003 p 52 Anderson 2010 p 99 a b Anderson 2010 p 99 100 Tudda 2020 p 1361 1362 Tudda 2020 p 1362 Gnoinska 2005 p 6 7 Gnoinska 2005 p 351 Gnoinska 2005 p 1 2 a b Karnow 1983 p 506 507 Gregory F Domber 2008 Supporting the Revolution America Democracy and the End of the Cold War in Poland 1981 1989 p 199 ISBN 9780549385165 revised as Domber 2014 p 110 1 Domber Gregory F 28 August 2014 What Putin Misunderstands about American Power University of California Press Blog University of North Carolina Press Cover Story The Holy AllianceBy Carl Bernstein Sunday June 24 2001 Branding Democracy U S Regime Change in Post Soviet Eastern Europe Gerald Sussman page 128 Looking to the Future Essays on International Law in Honor of W Michael Reisman Executive Secrets Covert Action and the Presidency William J Daugherty page 201 203 MacEachin Douglas J US Intelligence and the Polish Crisis 1980 1981 CIA June 28 2008 Grzesiuk Olszewska Irena 2003 Warszawska rzezba pomnikowa Warszawa Wydawnictwo Neriton pp 239 240 ISBN 83 88973 59 2 Uroczyste odsloniecie pomnika upamietniajacego Polakow ofiary ataku terrorystycznego w Nowym Jorku Biuro Bezpieczenstwa Narodowego 2002 09 11 Archived from the original on 2021 12 09 Retrieved 2021 12 09 Walt 2011 p 129 Frankel Glenn Richburg Keith B 30 April 2004 Curtain rises on EU rookies NBC News Retrieved 26 December 2021 a b c Harper May 6 2016 President Trump in Poland whitehouse gov Retrieved June 8 2017 via National Archives Rempfer Kyle 29 May 2018 Why Poland wants a permanent US military base and is willing to pay 2 billion for it Army Times Vienna Virginia Retrieved 15 August 2018 Zemla Edyta Turecki Kamil 30 May 2018 Poland offers US up to 2B for permanent military base Politico EU Brussels Retrieved 15 August 2018 a b c d Poland wants a fort with Donald Trump s name on it The Economist 12 January 2019 Retrieved 1 December 2022 Trump US to send 1 000 troops to Poland in new deal BBC 12 June 2019 US Polish presidents sign pact to boost American military presence in Poland DefenseNews 24 September 2019 Poland s Duda promises stronger alliance with Donald Trump during U S visit Euronews June 25 2020 Trump Poland to get some US troops withdrawn from Germany Star Tribune June 24 2020 Archived from the original on October 22 2020 Retrieved July 14 2020 Trump s plan to probably move troops to Poland reveals a dangerous lack of a real strategy Business Insider July 3 2020 a b c d e Cienski Jan Toosi Nahal 25 March 2022 Ukraine war turns Poland into America s indispensable ally Politico Retrieved 5 December 2022 a b Avery Dan 23 September 2020 Joe Biden condemns Poland s LGBT free zones NBC News Retrieved 5 December 2022 a b Easton Adam 30 June 2021 US embassy in Warsaw publishes video condemning LGBT hate BBC Retrieved 5 December 2022 Polish foreign minister says country s alliance with US worthless The Guardian 2014 06 22 Retrieved 25 June 2014 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 19 Retrieved 2017 02 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Half in Poland Reject U S Missile Defence Shield Angus Reid Global Monitor Archived from the original on 2009 05 02 Retrieved 2012 10 02 Poland Agrees to Accept U S Missile Interceptors by Peter Baker The New York Times October 21 2009 Retrieved October 21 2009 Tusk Demands U S Response to Obama Death Camp Remark Bloomberg White House shrugs off Polish apology demands Archived from the original on June 1 2012 a b c The explainer Lex TVN and Poland s parliamentary drama Emerging Europe 2021 08 12 Retrieved 2021 08 12 W Sejmie lex TVN i reasumpcja glosowania Lichocka Wszystko jest zgodnie z prawem www rp pl in Polish Retrieved 2021 08 12 Kondzinska Agata Wronski Pawel 11 August 2021 Lex TVN przyjete po skandalu w Sejmie i reasumpcji glosowania wyborcza pl Retrieved 2021 08 12 Will Poland s Kaczynski survive his own media law EUobserver 11 August 2021 Retrieved 2021 08 12 Armstrong Mark 2021 07 29 Poland Media freedom fears as TVN24 s licence extension is suspended euronews Retrieved 2021 08 12 Protests Held Across Poland in Opposition to Lex TVN Censorship Bill news yahoo com Retrieved 2021 08 12 EU slams newly passed law in Poland that could limit media freedom euronews 2021 08 12 Retrieved 2021 08 12 Polish lower house passes media reform bill which U S denounces Reuters 2021 08 11 Retrieved 2021 08 12 Embassy of Poland in Washington D C Embassy amp Consulate U S Embassy amp Consulate in Poland Retrieved 21 January 2024 Janusz Reiter The Visa Barrier Washington Post August 29 2007Further reading editAllen Debra J 2003 The Oder Neisse Line The United States Poland and Germany in the Cold War New York Praeger ISBN 9780313323591 Anderson Sheldon 2010 The German Question and Polish East German Relations 1945 1962 In Tobias Hochscherf Christoph Laucht Andrew Plowman eds Divided But Not Disconnected German Experiences of the Cold War Oxford Berghahn Books pp 99 104 ISBN 978 1845456467 Biskupski M B B The United States and the Rebirth of Poland 1914 1918 2012 Biskupski M B B Poland in American Foreign Policy 1918 1945 Sentimental or Strategic Friendship A Review Article Polish American Studies 1981 38 2 pp 5 15 in JSTOR Blejwas Stanislaus A Puritans and Poles The New England Literary Image of the Polish Peasant Immigrant Polish American Studies 1985 46 88 in JSTOR Cienciala Anna M The United States and Poland in World War II The Polish Review 2009 173 194 Daoudi M S and M S Dajani Poland The Politactics of Sanctions The Polish Review 1985 149 166 online Feis Herbert Churchill Roosevelt Stalin The War They Waged and the Peace They Sought A Diplomatic History of World War II 1957 ch 2 7 21 29 39 40 54 60 very detailed coverage Gnoinska Margaret March 2005 Poland and Vietnam 1963 New Evidence on Secret Communist Diplomacy and the Maneli Affair Cold War International History Project Working Paper 45 2 83 Karnow Stanley 1983 Vietnam A History New York Viking ISBN 0670746045 Jaroszyzska Kirchmann Anna D The Exile Mission The Polish Political Diaspora and Political America 1939 1956 Ohio University Press 2004 Jones J Sydney Polish Americans Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 3 Gale 2014 pp 477 492 online Jones Seth G A Covert Action Reagan the CIA and the Cold War Struggle in Poland WW Norton 2018 Kantorosinski Zbigniew Emblem of Good Will a Polish Declaration of Admiration and Friendship for the United States of America Washington DC Library of Congress 1997 Liponski Wojciech Anti American Propaganda in Poland From 1948 to 1954 A Story of An Ideological Failure American Studies International 1990 80 92 in JSTOR MacMillan Margaret 2001 Paris 1919 Six Months That Changed the World New York Randhom House ISBN 9780375760525 McGinley Theresa Kurk Embattled Polonia Polish Americans and World War II East European Quarterly 2003 37 3 pp 325 344 Manijak William Polish American Pressure Groups Woodrow Wilson and the Thirteenth Point The Significance of Polish Food Relief the Polish Vote in the 1916 Presidential Election and European Events in the Eventual Self Determination for Poland PhD dissertation Ball State University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1975 7616969 Mastny Vojtech The Soviet Non invasion of Poland in 1980 1981 and the End of the Cold War Europe Asia Studies 1999 51 2 189 211 online Michalski Artur Poland s Relations with the United States Yearbook of Polish Foreign Policy 01 2005 CEEOL Obsolete Link Pacy James S Polish Ambassadors and Ministers in Rome Tokyo and Washington DC 1920 1945 Part II The Polish Review 1985 381 395 Halina Parafianowicz Herbert C Hoover and Poland 1919 1933 Between Myth and Reality in Great Power Policies Towards Central Europe 1914 1945 Bristol e International Relations 2019 pp 176 198 1945 online free Pease Neal Poland the United States and the Stabilization of Europe 1919 1933 1986 excerpts Pienkos Donald E Of Patriots and Presidents America s Polish Diaspora and U S Foreign Policy Since 1917 Polish American Studies 2011 68 1 pp 5 17 in JSTOR Rothwell Victor 2001 The Origins of the Second World War Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719059582 Sjursen Helene The United States Western Europe and the Polish Crisis International Relations in the Second Cold War Palgrave Macmillan 2003 Tudda Christ 2020 The Rapacki Plan In Stephen Tucker ed The Cold War The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection Santa Monica ABC CLIO pp 1361 1362 ISBN 9781440860768 Tyszkiewicz Jakub Human Rights and the Jimmy Carter Administration s Policy towards Poland 1977 80 Cold War History 23 2 2023 307 325 DOI 10 1080 14682745 2022 2102606 online discussion of this articleVaughan Patrick G Beyond Benign Neglect Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Polish Crisis of 1980 The Polish Review 64 1 1999 3 28 onlineWalt Stephen 2011 Alliances in an unipolar world In G John Ikenberry Michael Mastanduno William C Wohlforth eds International Relations Theory and the Consequences of Unipolarity Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 99 139 ISBN 978 1139501644 Wandycz Piotr S The United States and Poland 1980 External links editHistory of Poland U S relations Kosciuszko Foundation Online Programs A REALLY BIG BIRTHDAY CARD Recovering a Polish and American Treasure Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poland United States relations amp oldid 1198819730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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