Poland's President Duda becomes latest leader to visit Donald Trump as allies eye possible return

Former U.S. President Donald Trump praised the Polish president, saying, “He's done a fantastic job and he's my friend. We had four great years together."

Updated - April 18, 2024 11:04 am IST - New York

Republican Presidential candidate former President Donald Trump walks with Poland’s President Andrzej Duda, at Trump Tower, in midtown Manhattan, in New York on April 17, 2024.

Republican Presidential candidate former President Donald Trump walks with Poland’s President Andrzej Duda, at Trump Tower, in midtown Manhattan, in New York on April 17, 2024. | Photo Credit: AP

Former President Donald Trump met on April 18 in New York with Polish President Andrzej Duda, the latest in a series of meetings with foreign leaders as Europe braces for the possibility of a second Trump term.

The presumptive Republican nominee hosted Mr. Duda at Trump Tower, where the two discussed the war in Ukraine and Mr. Duda's push to boost NATO members' defence spending, according to a readout from Mr. Trump's campaign. Mr. Duda, who has long expressed admiration for Mr. Trump, is also a staunch supporter of Ukraine and has encouraged Washington to provide more aid to Kyiv amid Russian's ongoing invasion. That funding has been held up by Mr. Trump allies in Congress.

As he arrived, Mr. Trump praised the Polish president, saying, “He's done a fantastic job and he's my friend. We had four great years together," Mr. Trump added. “We're behind Poland all the way." Mr. Duda is the latest foreign leader to meet with Mr. Trump in the weeks since he locked up the Republican nomination. U.S. allies across the world were caught off guard by Mr. Trump's surprise 2016 win, forcing them to scramble to build relationships with a President who often attacked longstanding treaties and alliances they valued. Setting up meetings with him during the 2024 campaign suggests they don't want to be behind again.

Even as he goes on trial for one of the four criminal indictments against him, Mr. Trump and Democratic President Joe Biden are locked in a rematch that most observers expect will be exceedingly close in November.

“Former President Barack Obama did a lengthy international tour”

While some in Poland worried the visit might damage the country's relationship with Mr. Biden, Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., a Biden ally and a major voice in his party on foreign affairs, said such meetings make sense.

“The polls are close,” he said. “If I were a foreign leader — and there's a precedent attached to meeting with candidates who are nominated or on the path to being nominated — I'd probably do it too.” Mr. Murphy noted that former President Barack Obama did a lengthy international tour and met with foreign leaders when he first ran for the White House. So did Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts Governor, who challenged Obama in 2012 and whose trip included a stop in Poland's capital, Warsaw.

Mr. Duda's visit comes a week after Mr. Trump met with British Foreign Secretary David Cameron, another NATO member and key proponent of supporting Ukraine, at the former President's Florida estate.

And last month, Mr. Trump hosted Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, an autocrat who has maintained the closest relationship with Russia among European Union countries. Mr. Orban shared a montage of footage of the visit on his Instagram feed, with included an image of him and his staff meeting with Mr. Trump and the former President's aides in a scene that looked like an official bilateral meeting.

Mr. Trump also met briefly in February with Javier Milei, the fiery, right-wing populist President of Argentina who ran a campaign inspired by Mr. Trump, complete with red “Make Argentina Great Again” hats. Milei gave Mr. Trump an excited hug backstage at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference outside Washington, according to video posted by a Trump campaign aide.

Biden administration officials have been careful not to weigh in publicly on foreign leaders' meetings with Mr. Trump, acknowledging he has a real chance of winning the race.

While some officials have privately expressed frustration with such meetings, they are mindful that any criticism would open the U.S. to charges of hypocrisy because senior American officials, including Secretary of State Antony Blinken, meet frequently with foreign opposition figures at various forums in the United States and abroad.

Security and policy officials monitor the travel plans of foreign officials visiting the U.S., but generally don't have a say in where they go or with whom they meet, according to an administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss protocol.

Mr. Trump has been back in his hometown this week for the start of his criminal hush money trial, which has dramatically limited his ability to travel and campaign. While in town, aides have been planning a series of events that began on Tuesday evening when Mr. Trump, after court adjourned, stopped by a Harlem bodega where a man was killed to rail against crime and blast the district attorney who made him the first former president in U.S. history to stand criminal trial.

Mr. Duda describes friendly relationship with Donald Trump

Mr. Duda, a right-wing populist who once proposed naming a military base in his country “Fort Trump," described the dinner on Wednesday as a private get-together between friends at Mr. Trump's former residence while he is in town for meetings at the United Nations.

“I have been invited by Mr. Donald Trump to his private apartment," Mr. Duda told reporters, saying it was “a normal practice when one country has good relations with another country” to want those relations to be as strong as "possible with the representatives of various sides of the political stage.” He described a friendly relationship with Mr. Trump built over years of working together.

“We know each other as people. Like two, I can say in some way, friends," said Mr. Duda, whose term ends in 2025.

Mr. Duda's visit comes as House Republicans wrangle over a $95 billion foreign aid bill that would provide new funding to Ukraine, including money for the U.S. military to replace depleting weapon supplies.

Many Trump allies in the House are fiercely opposed to aiding Ukraine, even as the country warns that it is struggling amid a fresh Russian offensive. Mr. Trump has said he might be open to aid in the form of a loan.

Like Mr. Cameron, Mr. Duda's efforts to push the U.S. to approve additional aid put him in common cause with Mr. Biden, who has struggled for six months to unlock additional funding.

One area where Mr. Trump and Mr. Duda agree when it comes to the conflict is a desire to push NATO members to increase their defense spending. Mr. Duda has called on fellow members of the alliance to raise their spending to 3% of gross domestic product as Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine. That would represent a significant increase from the current commitment of 2% by 2024.

Mr. Trump, in a stunning break from U.S. precedent, has long been critical of the Western alliance and has threatened not to defend member nations that do not hit that spending goal. That threat strikes at the heart of the alliance's Article 5, which states that any attack against one NATO member will be considered an attack against all.

In February, Mr. Trump went even further, recounting that he'd once told leaders that he would “encourage” Russia to “do whatever the hell they want” to members that are — in his words — “delinquent.” Mr. Trump's campaign said the two discussed the NATO proposal during the meeting, which lasted two-and-a-half hours.

“I have never talked with President Donald Trump about my proposal of raising the spending on defense of NATO countries from 2% to 3% of GDP, but I think that his approach to it will be positive,” Mr. Duda had said before they met.

The two also discussed Israel and the Middle East, Mr. Trump's 2017 trip to Warsaw, “and many other topics having to do with getting to world peace,” the campaign said in its readout, which described the men as “great friends.”

The visit was met with mixed reaction in Poland, where fears of Russia run high and Mr. Duda's friendly relationship with Mr. Trump has been a source of controversy.

Poland's centrist Prime Minister Donald Tusk, a political opponent of Mr. Duda, was critical of the dinner but expressed hope that Mr. Duda would use it as an opportunity “to raise the issue of clearly siding with the Western world, democracy and Europe in this Ukrainian-Russian conflict.” Mr. Duda, for his part, said he wasn't worried since Presidents regularly meet with various politicians during foreign trips. “This is regular practice," he said. "There is nothing extraordinary here.”

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