France and Poland planned increased defence cooperation in a meeting of their leaders Monday held against a background of Russia’s expansionist threat and a waning US commitment to Europe.
French President Emmanuel Macron and Polish premier Donald Tusk told a news conference in Gdansk, northern Poland, that the scope of the boosted ties between the two NATO members could cover elements of nuclear deterrence, military satellites, joint drills, defence industry and shared intelligence.
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“Our cooperation, whether in the nuclear domain or in joint exercises ... is a cooperation that knows no bounds,” Tusk said.
Macron said work would be done in the next few months allowing “concrete progress”, notably when it came to nuclear deterrence.
“There may be deployments” to Poland of French warplanes carrying nuclear warheads, he said.
While France has specified it would retain full control over the decision to use force, Polish forces could contribute in areas such as early warning and air defence, both sides say.
The public display of closer relations between the countries reflected adaptation by European Union nations of a changed threat environment, and to US President Donald Trump publicly disparaging NATO and toying with the idea of pulling his country out of the alliance.
Trump has called NATO allies “cowards” and the alliance itself a “paper tiger” in frustration that its members did not join the US-Israeli war in the Middle East.
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