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Biden in Poland: How NATO’s eastern half increasingly leads on Ukraine

President Joe Biden’s address Tuesday on the war in Ukraine, one day after his visit to wartime Kyiv, was delivered in Warsaw. The symbolism was important. Mr. Biden was affirming the growing importance of Poland and its neighbors in the wake of the fierce war – an eastward shift in the center of gravity of both NATO and the European Union.

Given their experience of Soviet domination, Poland and other Eastern European allies ramped up defense spending and pushed for more aggressive policies toward Moscow even before the war, and have emerged as spirited, spiritual leaders of the war effort.

Why We Wrote This

As NATO and the European Union hammer out a consensus approach to helping Ukraine resist the Russian invasion, new paths to cooperation and leadership are evolving between Western and Eastern European allies.

In the process, internal struggles over the rule of law that Western leaders had routinely decried among their Eastern allies have been back-burnered. Any struggles to uphold democratic norms within their own borders, however, will ultimately limit the amount of influence Eastern members will exert in the Western alliance, analysts say.

“You need to lead by example, and Eastern Europe has definitely been doing that in terms of the support they give to Ukraine,” says Mathieu Droin, a French expert on NATO. “But they need to step up in terms of rule of law if they want to really be acknowledged as countries that can steer Europe.”

President Joe Biden’s much-anticipated address Tuesday on the war in Ukraine, one day after his unannounced visit to the wartime capital of Kyiv, was delivered in Warsaw.

The symbolism was important. Mr. Biden was affirming the growing importance of Poland and its neighbors as the center of gravity of both NATO and the European Union shifts decidedly eastward in the wake of the fierce war raging just across Poland’s borders.

“We’re seeing again today what the people of Poland, and the people across Europe, saw for decades: Appetites of the autocrat cannot be appeased – they must be opposed,” the president said.

Why We Wrote This

As NATO and the European Union hammer out a consensus approach to helping Ukraine resist the Russian invasion, new paths to cooperation and leadership are evolving between Western and Eastern European allies.

At the same time, he added, the Herculean work the Western alliance faces in bolstering Ukraine and building the kind of world it wants encompasses “not just what we’re against – it’s what we’re for.”

Mr. Biden’s trip marks the first time an American president has ever visited Poland twice in one year. As the 6th biggest economy in Europe, the country has one of the largest armies in the European Union. It is host, too, to the Pentagon’s first permanent military presence in Eastern Europe.

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