U.S. President Trump welcomed President Andrzej Duda of Poland to the
White House on June 24, 2020, thus on the same day that a rescheduled
military parade rolled through Red Square in Moscow. The Trump
administration agreed that an additional 1,000 U.S. troops would be
added to Poland, the sole outcome of the latest round of the U.S.-Polish
talks that confirmed what the two parties had concluded a year ago.
Despite that, Russia is afraid of U.S. forces moving from Germany to
Poland. In Moscow, many say that would push the balance of power
throughout the region in favor of NATO countries.
Russian officials have lambasted the U.S. plan to relocate a portion of
its troops from Germany to Poland following early, unconfirmed reports.
The Trump-Duda meeting irked them even more. While commenting on the
talks, Konstantin Kosachev, the chairman of the Russian Federation
Council’s foreign affairs committee, said “the problem is where exactly
U.S. troops will be moved.” “As Trump noted,” he went on, “some of them
will come back home, while others will be relocated to other countries,
including Poland. And that is a different matter. One thing is to send
troops home, and the other –– to push them closer to our borders.”
Alexander Grushko, Russia’s deputy foreign minister, said his government
would take a closer look on what might follow Trump’s statement about
removing a portion of U.S. troops from Germany and relocating them to
Poland. “Russia is closely following the US plans to move part of its
troops from Germany to Poland, and will implement all the needed
measures to ensure its national security, as the U.S. may violate the Russia-NATO Founding Act on Mutual Relations,” Grushko was quoted as saying.
If reassigned to Poland, an extra U.S. contingent could beef up NATO’s
eastern wing, Russian experts say while chiefly focusing on the
military. Russian press outlets say Trump is keen to warn Russia when
moving U.S. troops to Poland. Experts told Nezavismaya Gazeta, a Russian
daily, that fourth-generation F-16CJ multi-functional light fighters
from Spangdahlem Air Base would be sent to Poland in a somewhat
outrageous move for Russia. “If Poland purchased F-35A Lightning II
fighters, the total number of modern offensive combat aircraft in this
country would be more than 100 units,” it reported. Likewise, Poland
could host as many fourth-generation aircraft as Russia’s Western
Military District.
https://warsawinstitute.org/russia-afraid-u-s-troops-moving-germany-poland/