Poland ends demand for WW2 reparations from Germany

23 Oct, 2024 13:43 / Updated 2 months ago
FM Radoslaw Sikorski says Berlin should instead come up with a “creative” gesture to convince Warsaw it is sorry for the Nazis’ crimes

Poland will no longer demand that Germany pay reparations for crimes committed by the Nazis during World War II, Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski has stated. Warsaw and Berlin are now allies, especially when it comes to deterring the threat they see posed by Russia, the diplomat said.

Under the previous right-wing government led by the conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party, Poland repeatedly brought up the issue of war reparations with Germany. In 2022, Warsaw estimated that Berlin would need to shell out PLN 6.2 trillion (around $1.5 trillion) in compensation for damages inflicted by the Nazi occupation.

Appearing on Poland’s TVP Info channel on Tuesday, Sikorski said that “we’re not talking about reparations, but rather a gesture showing that the Germans feel that they are morally responsible for what they did to us.”

According to the minister, “the ball is now in Germany’s court,” with the onus on them to “offer a creative decision.” He suggested that the neighboring country could take care of the remaining survivors of the Nazi occupation of Poland and erect a memorial in Berlin to commemorate the tragic events.

Sikorski pointed out that both NATO member states should focus on the future, since “we and Germany are allies and, for example, we need each other to fend off Russian missiles [deployed in Russia’s Kaliningrad Region] or Russian submarines in the Baltic Sea.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly rejected the idea that Moscow has any plans to attack NATO, calling such speculation “nonsense.” The Kremlin also says it has been forced to beef up its defenses along its Western border as more countries in Eastern Europe have joined the bloc.

Back in February, Sikorski acknowledged that “unfortunately, reparations [from Germany] cannot be obtained.” Around the same time, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk made it clear that “in the formal, legal and international sense, the issue of reparations was closed many years ago.”

Berlin maintains that the matter was resolved when Warsaw waived its right to restitution in 1953 under a deal with East Germany, and that the issue was definitively settled under a 1990 treaty on German reunification.

In February, the Polish foreign minister further argued that following World War II, it was agreed that Poland would receive 15% of reimbursements to which the USSR was entitled. The diplomat accused Moscow of “taking it away.”

Commenting on Warsaw’s claim, Kremlin press secretary Dmitry Peskov described it as more evidence of Poland’s “frenzied Russophobia.”