Poland to Germany: Pay up! – POLITICO Europe

Press play to listen to this article

At a time when the attention of the European Union is focused on preventing Russia from conquering Ukraine, Poland is reigniting a conflict from the past with the countrys de facto ruler on Thursday calling for Germany to pay 6.2 trillion zoty (1.3 trillion) in reparations for its 1939-1945 occupation.

This is our goal, Jarosaw Kaczyski, the head of Polands ruling nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party, said on the 83rd anniversary of Nazi Germanys invasion of Poland.

I know that we are embarking on a path that will take a long time and will not be easy. We do not promise quick successes, Kaczyski said in a press conference to publicize a report prepared by Law and Justice.

Poland was ravaged by Germanys invasion and occupation, with about 6 million deaths a fifth of the population (including almost all of its Jewish people). Warsaw was left a smoking ruin. Thursdays news conference was held in Warsaws royal castle, a building destroyed during the war and only rebuilt in the 1970s.

The Germans invaded Poland and did great damage to us. The occupation was extremely criminal, incredibly cruel and caused effects that in many cases continue to this day, Kaczyski said.

But Polands post-war communist government a satellite of the USSR agreed to drop demands for reparations against East Germany in 1953, making it legally complicated for Warsaw to file any claims. Poland also gained large territories from Germany after the war, while losing about a third of pre-war Polands lands to the Soviet Union.

The position of the Federal Government is unchanged, the reparations issue is closed, said Germanys foreign ministry. Poland renounced further reparations a long time ago, in 1953, and has confirmed this renunciation several times. This is an essential basis for todays European order. Germany stands politically and morally by its responsibility for the Second World War.

There is no chance for reparations, Radosaw Sikorski, a member of the European Parliament from the opposition Civic Platform party and a former Polish foreign minister, said in a radio interview, warning that the only impact will be to worsen relations between Warsaw and Berlin. Its pure propaganda, a fairy tale for the nave.

Donald Tusk, the leader of Civic Platform and a former Polish prime minister and president of the European Council, accused Kaczyski of playing politics with his demand.

This is not about any reparations from Germany, this is about a political campaign, he said. Jarosaw Kaczyski is not hiding it, that they want to rebuild support for the ruling party with this anti-German campaign.

PiS hopes to win an unprecedented third term in power in next years parliamentary election. Although the party is still leading in opinion polls, it has been losing ground to the opposition as the country deals with high inflation, slowing economic growth and soaring energy prices.

Kaczyski has long seen Germany as Polands historic enemy, despite both countries being in NATO and in the EU, and Germany being by far Polands largest trading partner. Hes suspicious that Berlin is using the EU as a cover to build the Fourth Reich.

Polands relationship with Germany has taken a further battering thanks to Russias invasion of Ukraine. Warsaw has been one of the most enthusiastic backers of Kyiv, sending money and weapons to Ukraine, while leading the charge to cut off imports of Russian energy and to block Russian tourists from visiting the Continent. Berlins caution in moving rapidly in the same direction has aroused Polish anger.

Kaczyskis demand is still not official government policy, and Warsaw hasnt issued any formal request to Berlin.

We are obliged today to calculate these losses as accurately as possible and present a proper account to those who owe it, said Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki.

Berlin feels that the 1990 deal allowing West and East Germany to unify ended all outstanding issues related to the war, and rejects demands for reparations.

Germany has paid compensation to individual victims of the Holocaust and to people forced to work as slave laborers, but not to other countries; Greece has an outstanding claim estimated at 289 billion, but the German parliament found it does not have legal merit.

Wilhelmine Preussen contributed reporting.

This article has been updated with comment from the German foreign ministry.

Read more from the original source:
Poland to Germany: Pay up! - POLITICO Europe

Related Posts

Comments are closed.