Andrew Korybko
Their snubbing discredits the image that Poland wants
to cultivate of a former Great Power that’s finally reviving its long-lost
status as a European leader
Politico reported that “Poland fumes about being cut out of Ukraine
peace talks” after it wasn’t invited to the recent meeting in London and
the prior one in Geneva.
The former included France, Germany, the UK (the E3), and Ukraine while the
latter included them and the US. Poland’s absence was conspicuous since it’s
spent the world’s largest percentage of its GDP on Ukraine (4.91%, most
of which went to refugees), donated its entire stockpile to it, and plays a
pivotal military logistics role in the conflict.
Poles are therefore upset that
their country is still excluded from the Ukrainian peace process (the first
time was the Berlin
Summit in October 2024) despite all that it’s done for that
neighboring country. For as difficult as it may be for them and their officials
to accept, however, there are sensible reasons behind this from the perspective
of all key players whose interests curiously intersect on this issue. Poland is
fiercely anti-Russian, which explains why Moscow refuses to discuss the
conflict’s settlement with it.
As for the US, it’s finally
serious about reaching a grand compromise with Russia for ending their proxy
war and heralding a world-changing
“New Détente”, which is why it too doesn’t want Poland to obstruct this
outcome through involvement in the peace process. At the same time, “Poland
Will Play A Central Role In Advancing The US’ National Security Strategy In
Europe”, but only as the US’ junior partner who’s forced to operate within
the new European security architecture that
Trump and Putin plan to build.
The German-led EU’s interests are different since Germany and Poland are in a zero-sum rivalry that was described from their perspectives here and here. Ukraine is one of the countries within which they’re competing as explained here in late 2023 so it follows that Germany wants to exclude Poland from discussions about its conflict’s endgame. This is achieved by leveraging its influence over the EU to ensure that Poland isn’t invited to E3 summits (the latest one in Berlin was meant to be more inclusive).
Regarding Ukraine itself, ties
with Poland have been troubled in recent years, so Kiev doesn’t want to reward
Warsaw with the prestige associated with participation in the peace process.
For these reasons, each in pursuit of their self-interests, Russia, the US, the
German-led EU, and Ukraine have thus far tacitly agreed to exclude Poland from
these discussions. Their snubbing discredits the image that Poland wants to
cultivate of a former Great Power that’s finally reviving its long-lost status
as a European leader.
About that, while Poland veritably has the potential to restore
its historic role in the region, it can only do so with US support since Warsaw
doesn’t have the sway over patriotic-nationalist parties that Washington does
for rallying them all against the EU’s federalization plans. Moreover, “Poland’s
Military-Industrial Complex Is Embarrassingly Underdeveloped”, with
even Politico describing its
defense industry as a “dwarf” in a recent article. Poland therefore simply
doesn’t have the same influence as the E3 does.
Seeing as how Poland isn’t
(yet?) a Great Power (again) and would be a hollow one if it ever (re)attains
this status, it shouldn’t act too big for its britches by expecting a seat at
the table alongside Great Powers like France, Germany, and the UK. The E3 isn’t
even able to exert influence over this process despite their best efforts so
there’s no way that much less influential Poland could succeed where they
failed. The US and Ukraine also have their reasons for excluding it too, which
altogether bruises Poland’s national ego.
Andrew Korybko, Substack,
December 16, 2025
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