Poland’s
Double Trouble for EU and Russia
By Finian
Cunningham
January 22, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"SCF"
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Poland’s new ultra-nationalist government is
sharpening the European Union’s internal problems.
Just as EU leaders are warning that the bloc is in
danger of collapse from internal tensions, the
ascendant Eurosceptic Poles are pushing
contradictions to the limits. In an attempt to ease
the EU strain, the US-led NATO alliance is being
called upon to mollify Poland’s anti-EU government.
However, in mitigating the EU’s «Poland problem»,
the consequence will mean more NATO aggression
towards Russia.
When Poland’s new President Andrzej
Duda was received in Brussels this week there was a
palpable sense of strained relations with the
28-member EU bloc. The EU announced that it was
going ahead with a formal inquiry into fresh laws
enacted earlier this month by the ruling Justice and
Law (PiS) party. The party came to power in Polish
elections last October on a platform of anti-EU
rhetoric and socially conservative policies,
propelled by Poland’s largely Catholic electorate.
The new Polish laws in question allow
Duda’s government to sack or appoint senior managers
of the country’s publicly owned media networks and
also to weaken the constitutional court. The latter
is seen as a move towards giving the ruling party
more power to enact its brand of conservative
policies. The EU formal probe into Poland’s new laws
will determine if they contravene the bloc’s
«democratic standards». More Brussels-Warsaw
confrontation is on the way.
As Deutsche Welle commented: «Many
EU member states see the changes in Poland as
reflecting a return to nationalist, anti-EU
sentiment in the bloc’s new eastern European
members».
Duda’s Justice and Law party is
firmly against joining the Euro single currency; and
it wants more autonomy for Warsaw to set its own
economic policies, such as raising taxes on bank
assets. Poland is ditching the pro-EU stance that
was the hallmark of previous Warsaw governments ever
since the country joined the bloc in 2004. That’s a
big concern for Brussels.
The new Warsaw administration is also
averse to the influx of immigrants from outside
Europe. Justice and Law party leader Jarosław
Kaczyński has infuriated liberal sensibilities in
Brussels with testy anti-immigrant statements. He
has said, according to a Reuters report, that
Muslim refugees would not be welcome because they
«threaten Poland’s Catholic way of life».
Such anti-immigrant views have
rankled the German government of Angela Merkel.
Berlin was formerly close to Warsaw as an EU
partner. But the harder Polish line towards
refugee-intake is causing consternation in Berlin,
partly because it means Germany being more burdened
with its erstwhile open-door policy.
Moreover, Poland’s strident
anti-immigrant policy serves to embolden other
central and eastern European member states in their
reluctance to take in refugees. Austria, Hungary,
Slovakia, Czech Republic and Slovenia are vexed that
they are feeling the brunt from the more than one
million refugees to have entered the EU this past
year alone, largely from the conflict zones of
Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq. Representing one of the
largest EU countries, Poland’s Justice and Law
government adds more political gravitas to the
anti-immigrant ranks.
But the EU problems stirred up by
Warsaw are bigger than the narrow issue of
migration. In challenging Brussels’ centralized
economic policies and laws, in favor of more
nationalist-oriented interests, Warsaw is piling on
more Eurosceptic pressure to challenge the entire EU
project. Eurosceptic parties, both on the political
right and left, are soaring across Europe, from
Britain to Belgium, France, Spain, Italy,
Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden on top of the
fractious eastern EU members.
Poland and other eastern European
countries pose an acute threat to the Brussels
establishment and aligned governments in Paris and
Berlin. Because these dissident states are more
militant in pursuing their national interests – and
in particular on the issue of non-EU migrants. Both
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker
and European Council President Donald Tusk issued
dire warnings in the past week that if free movement
is undermined by member states closing borders then
the whole EU structure is in danger of collapsing.
Added to this challenge is that the
Polish Justice and Law government is now openly
flouting EU central rule of law with its new media
and judicial legislation. This bold dissent from
Brussels authority by Warsaw will no doubt galvanize
other like-minded European parties to follow suit in
asserting their national interests against
centralized edicts from the European Commission.
From Russia’s point of view, it is
arguable that instability, uncertainty and
incoherence within the EU might be construed as an
advantage for Moscow.
For one thing, such instability
undermines the EU’s blanket adoption of US-led
economic sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine
crisis. Several EU countries have already expressed
disquiet over the sanctions policy on account of the
damage to their own economies from the severance of
business ties with Russia. The more fractious the
bloc becomes over internal matters the less cohesive
it is on implementing anti-Russian sanctions.
So, on one hand, from a Russian
perspective, the rise of Eurosceptic parties is to
be welcomed.
However, Poland is a case of double
trouble. This is because the coming to power of the
Justice and Law party will mean a more aggressive
NATO policy in Eastern Europe towards Russia.
Poland has shown itself to be
fervently pro-NATO since the end of the Cold War.
And anti-Soviet sentiments are of course a big axe
to grind within Poland even before the new
ultra-nationalist government.
But the Justice and Law party takes
NATO cheerleading to new heights, as well as the
mantra of alleged Russian aggression to Europe.
While President Duda was in Brussels
this week it was significant that he also called at
the NATO
headquarters in the Belgian capital, greeted by
the military alliance’s secretary general Jens
Stoltenberg.
Duda made an explicit appeal to NATO
for more troops, weapons and «infrastructure» to be
permanently based on Polish soil.
The Polish president said at a joint
press conference: «Today,
everything points to the need to have substantial
presence of both infrastructure and military units
on the ground in central European countries, as well
as a well worked-out system for these units and
defense should there be any act of [Russian]
aggression… That means increasing presence in
central-eastern Europe, both in terms of
infrastructure and in terms of troops of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization… I would want it to be
permanent to the greatest extent possible».
Stoltenberg gave a receptive response
to what would constitute a serious escalation of
NATO firepower pointed at Russia.
«NATO now has a persistent military
presence in the region, of which Poland is part. And
I trust that after the Warsaw summit [set to take
place in July] we would see more NATO in Poland than
ever before», added
Stoltenberg.
Getting back to Poland’s internal
trouble for the EU, the Financial Times this
week reported in
brief but significant words: «The
[new Polish] media and judicial measures have
sparked criticism from national leaders in Europe
and prompted calls for the Obama administration to
intervene».
We thus plausibly surmise the
following: the EU establishment in Brussels and its
main national supporter in Berlin are deeply
concerned by Poland’s anti-European administration
and how it is fueling more dissent within the bloc.
Warsaw is adding unbearable pressure on an already
acutely pressurized EU. But this Warsaw government
is also rabidly pro-NATO and anti-Russian. Therein
lies a release valve for Brussels.
What the Financial Times clip
above reveals is that the EU establishment is
calling on the Obama administration to mediate with
its troublesome surrogate in Warsaw. That inevitably
means that President Duda’s request will be met by
the Americans for more NATO troops, tanks, missiles
and warplanes to be permanently stationed in Poland
and other pro-NATO states in the Baltic, Romania and
Bulgaria. That escalation entails a dramatically
greater aggressive posture towards Russia on NATO’s
eastern flank.
In exchange, Brussels seems to be
betting on NATO favors taking the anti-EU sting out
of Warsaw.
In other words, the EU’s problem with
an uppity Poland is being solved by indulging Warsaw
through NATO. But in trying to solve its internal
problems, as manifest in Poland, the EU is shifting
the trouble on to its external relations with
Russia.
© Strategic
Culture Foundation
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