Why Poland’s Absence From Washington Could Prove Fortunate – COMMENTARY

A diplomatic failure that might have a silver lining

19 August 2025

Wojciech Przybylski

Editor-in-Chief

The lack of Polish presence at key meetings in Washington, admittedly a missed opportunity, could become less of a problem and more of a fortunate coincidence. Warsaw avoids normalising Russian imperialism and retains leeway in future military commitments – while the transatlantic alliance agrees on a major arms deal.

In an era when the global chessboard trembles under the weight of Russian aggression, and the United States, under Donald Trump’s leadership, is returning to transactional diplomacy, the absence of representatives of Poland and other Central European countries from key meetings in Washington may seem like a strategic faux pas.

Yet, analysing recent events – from the controversial Trump-Putin summit in Alaska to the dramatic negotiations involving Volodymyr Zelenskyy – one could say that this absence had a silver lining. First of all, the region distances itself from the pitfalls of symbolic normalisation of Russian imperialism. Second, Central Europeans did not have to make any additional financial or military commitments beyond the help they have already provided to Ukraine. This is key at a time when they need to replenish supplies to hold NATO’s frontline.

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Wojciech Przybylski

Editor-in-Chief

Wojciech Przybylski is leading strategic foresight on EU affairs to improve democratic security of Poland in Europe. He organises EuropeFuture.Forum as the Editor of Visegrad Insight and the President of Res Publica Foundation. An advisory board member at LSE IDEAS Ratiu Forum, European Forum of New Ideas. A guest lecturer at the Foreign Service Institute for the U.S. Government, Warsaw University and CEU Democracy Institute. He co-authored among others a book 'Understanding Central Europe’, (Routledge 2017), and 'On the Edge. Poland' (Culturescapes 2019), 'Let's Agree on Poland' (Oxford University Press, 2025) and was widely published in the international press.

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