Poland’s government has approved formal steps aimed at bringing a permanent American military base onto Polish soil, on NATO’s eastern flank. The plan marks a possible strategic shift in how U.S. forces are deployed in Europe, where Poland has relied for years on roughly 10,000 American troops stationed on a rotating basis.
Deputy Defense Minister Cezary Tomczyk said on Wednesday that Washington has shown interest in considering the idea, and that Warsaw’s cabinet decision amounts to an official invitation to the U.S. He said the model under review is a jointly funded base, though the Pentagon has not issued any public statement. Defense Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz said Poland is doing everything it can to make a permanent base happen, while acknowledging that the final decision rests with the Americans.
The initiative comes after a period of uncertainty in bilateral defense ties. In May, the U.S. unexpectedly halted a planned deployment of 4,000 troops to Poland. That episode followed earlier tensions around American force levels in Germany, after Donald Trump threatened to reduce U.S. troops there in response to criticism from German Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Washington’s Iran policy.
The confusion prompted a Polish delegation to travel to Washington for emergency talks, which ended with Trump posting on social media that he intended to send 5,000 more troops to Poland. Warsaw now hopes the changing security environment in Europe will turn the temporary rotation model into a stable permanent presence. Tomczyk said, “We cannot read the future with tea leaves, but we are presenting a serious proposal as part of serious working dialogue with the United States.”