Friday, May 22, 2026 - US President Donald Trump has declared that the United States will send an additional 5,000 troops to Poland, an apparent reversal following recent moves by his administration to reduce the number of US troops in Europe.
The announcement comes one week after Defense Secretary Pete
Hegseth stopped the scheduled deployment of a combat team expected to rotate
through Poland, a decision his department said was based on frustration with
European nations who have “not stepped up when America needed them.”
It also follows an announcement by Trump earlier this month
that he was pulling 5,000 troops from Germany, whose Chancellor Friedrich Merz
said the United States was being “humiliated” in its war with Iran, angering
Trump.
In contrast, Trump said the deployment to Poland, a key
funnel for European aid to neighboring Ukraine, was based on his good
relationship with Warsaw’s right-wing populist President Karol Nawrocki. “Based
on the successful Election of the now President of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, who
I was proud to Endorse, and our relationship with him, I am pleased to announce
that the United States will be sending an additional 5,000 Troops to Poland,”
Trump posted.
It is unclear where the 5,000 troops that Trump mentioned
will come from or how it will change US troop numbers in Europe. The surprise
announcement creates further uncertainty about the US posture in Europe, after
Trump soured on NATO allies who spoke out against the Iran war or failed to
provide what he sees as sufficient help.
Polish ministers seemed to indicate that the announcement
would not substantially change troop numbers in Poland. The country’s foreign
minister Radosław Sikorski thanked Trump for his “announcement that the
presence of American troops in Poland will be maintained more or less at
previous levels.”
“All’s well that ends well,” he told reporters before a
meeting of NATO’s foreign ministers in Sweden Friday. Meanwhile, Polish defense
minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz said, according to Reuters that Poland won’t
lose any US troops.
“One thing is certain, Poland is certainly not losing what it
had – around 10,000 soldiers,” he told reporters. US Secretary of State Marco
Rubio will also attend that NATO meeting, where he “will discuss the need for
increased defense investment and greater burden sharing in the Alliance,”
according to a department spokesperson.
Speaking to reporters ahead of the meeting, NATO’s chief Mark
Rutte said he welcomed Trump’s announcement, but NATO’s trajectory is toward a
“stronger Europe and a stronger NATO” that is “less reliant on one ally only,”
according to Reuters.
Poland is a NATO member and has served as the main hub for
Western military aid flowing into Ukraine since Russia’s invasion in 2022. In
2023, the US established the US Army Garrison Poland, solidifying its military
footprint in the country.
The US typically has about 10,000 troops stationed in Poland.
The Pentagon referred questions to the White House.
Nawrocki thanked Trump in a post on X Thursday, calling the
US-Poland alliance “a vital pillar of security for every Polish home and for
all of Europe.”
“Good alliances are those based on cooperation, mutual
respect, and a commitment to our shared security,” Nawrocki said. Nawrocki was
elected in June 2025 and visited the Oval Office for a meeting with Trump in
September, where he thanked Trump for his endorsement.
Last week, Hegseth abruptly canceled two US military
deployments to Europe and ordered the removal of other personnel from the
continent, reducing the number of US troops in Europe by roughly 5,000.
A memo signed by Hegseth halted the scheduled deployment of
2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, which was expected to
rotate through Poland and other countries including the Baltic states and
Romania, according to two defense officials. Some personnel from the brigade
were already in Europe and now must redeploy back to the US.
The memo also canceled the future deployment to Germany of a
battalion that specializes in firing long-range rockets and missiles, the
defense officials said, and directed that a command in Europe overseeing those
capabilities be removed from the continent.
There are roughly 4,700 soldiers in the brigade combat team
whose deployment to Europe has been canceled, and over 500 soldiers in the
long-range rocket and missile battalion, one of the defense officials said.

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