Pompeo inks deal for US troop move from Germany to Poland

Published August 17, 2020
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, and Poland's Minister of Defence Mariusz Blaszczak greet each other after signing the US-Poland Enhanced Defence Cooperation Agreement in the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland on Aug 15. — AP
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, and Poland's Minister of Defence Mariusz Blaszczak greet each other after signing the US-Poland Enhanced Defence Cooperation Agreement in the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland on Aug 15. — AP

WARSAW; US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Saturday sealed a defence cooperation deal with Polish officials that will pave the way for the redeployment of American troops from Germany to Poland.

In Warsaw at the end of a four-nation tour of central and eastern Europe, Pompeo and Polish Defense Minister Mariusz Baszczak signed an Enhanced Defence Cooperation Agreement that sets out the legal framework for the additional troop presence.

This is going to be an extended guarantee: a guarantee that in case of a threat our soldiers are going to stand arm-in-arm, Poland’s President Andrzej Duda said during the signing ceremony. It will also serve to increase the security of other countries in our part of Europe, Duda said.

The deal would also further other aspects of US-Polish cooperation, he added, citing primarily investment and trade ties.

The pact supplements an existing Nato Status of Forces Agreement and allows for the enhancement and modernisation of existing capabilities and facilities by allowing US forces to access additional Polish military installations. It also sets out a formula for sharing the logistical and infrastructure costs of an expanded US presence in the country.

President Donald Trump said in a statement that the pact was the culmination of months of negotiations with Poland.

The agreement will enhance our military cooperation and increase the United States’ military presence in Poland to further strengthen Nato deterrence, bolster European security, and help ensure democracy, freedom, and sovereignty, Trump’s statement said.

Some 4,500 US troops are currently based in Poland, but about 1,000 more are to be added, under a bilateral decision announced last year. Last month, in line with Trump’s demand to reduce troop numbers in Germany, the Pentagon announced that some 12,000 troops would be withdrawn from Germany with about 5,600 moving to other countries in Europe, including Poland.

In addition, several US military commands will be moved out of Germany, including the US Army V Corps overseas headquarters that will relocate to Poland next year.

Trump has long and loudly complained that Germany does not spend enough on defense and has repeatedly accused Germany of failing to pay Nato bills, which is a misstatement of the issue. Nato nations have pledged to dedicate 2pc of their gross domestic product.

After the signing ceremony, Pompeo joined Duda and other Polish leaders at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier to mark the centennial of Poland’s landmark victory against the Russian Bolsheviks in 1920 during the Polish-Soviet war.

In the Battle of Warsaw, often called the Miracle on the Vistula, outnumbered Polish troops led by Marshal Jozef Pilsudski defeated an advancing Red Army.

The battle is credited with stopping the Bolsheviks’ westward march, and remains a source of huge national pride in Poland.

Saturday’s signing came just a day after the Trump administration suffered an embarrassing diplomatic loss at the United Nations when its proposal to indefinitely extend an arms embargo on Iran was soundly defeated in a UN Security Council vote that saw only one country side with the US Pompeo will visit that country, the Dominican Republic, on Sunday for the inauguration of its new president.

Published in Dawn, August 17th, 2020

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