Poland is ready to host nuclear arms if Nato decides to deploy the weapons in the face of Russia reinforcing its armaments in Belarus and Kaliningrad, the country’s president, Andrzej Duda, said in an interview published on Monday.
Poland, a Nato member and a staunch supporter of Ukraine, shares a border with both Russia’s Kaliningrad enclave and with Belarus, Moscow’s ally.
Kaliningrad was cut off from Moscow when Lithuania became independent during the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991.
“If our allies decide to deploy nuclear arms on our territory as part of nuclear sharing, to reinforce Nato’s eastern flank, we are ready to do so,” Duda said in an interview published by the Fakt daily.
Duda spoke to the Polish media after a visit to New York, where he held meetings at the UN and discussed the war in Ukraine with former US president Donald Trump. In March, he visited Washington DC, where he met with US President Joe Biden.
Discussions about nuclear cooperation between Poland and the US have been ongoing “for some time”, he said.
“I have already talked about this several times. I must admit that when asked about it, I declared our readiness,” Duda said.
“Russia is increasingly militarising Kaliningrad. Recently it has been relocating its nuclear weapons to Belarus,” he added.
In June 2023, Vladimir Putin confirmed that Russia had sent tactical nuclear arms to Belarus, which borders Ukraine and Poland.