Poland is seeking to turn the U.S. military’s largely rotational presence in the country into a permanent deployment of up to 15,000 troops, a senior Polish official said this week.
Marcin Przydacz, a minister in Poland’s presidential office, said Warsaw was discussing with the United States an expansion beyond current plans.
“Our ambition is 15,000, while the minimum version is 11,000,” Przydacz said in an interview with Polish broadcaster RMF FM. “The final decisions are still ahead of us.”
The U.S. military has operated in Poland for years, but most infrastructure built over the past decade has supported rotational units on temporary missions.
Przydacz said a permanent presence for larger units, such as Army brigades, would require garrisons and support services for families, including on-post schools, health clinics, and housing. He said that would take years if approved.
In May, the United States canceled the deployment of about 4,000 armored brigade soldiers to Poland. Weeks later, President Donald Trump said he would send 5,000 troops to the country.
After meeting Trump in Washington over the weekend, Polish President Karol Nawrocki said the talks confirmed that the 5,000-troop plan was still on track.
The Pentagon has not said where those troops would come from, when they might deploy, or where they would be based in Poland.
“It is one thing for troops to come to Poland, but we also need to know where they will be stationed, which base they will use and where they will be accommodated,” Przydacz added.
Before the armored brigade deployment was canceled, about 10,000 U.S. troops were operating in Poland.