WARSAW — The EU’s €150 billion SAFE loans-for-weapons program was supposed to
boost Poland’s rearmament, but instead it’s fueling a political war between the
president and the prime minister.
While the pro-EU government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk wants a €44 billion
SAFE loan, aiming to continue the country’s rapid military buildup in a way that
doesn’t worsen already strained public finances, nationalist President Karol
Nawrocki is hunting for an alternative that involves financing armaments
expenditures through the National Bank of Poland (NBP).
The two men are sparring ahead of a crucial parliamentary election next year,
where the right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party aligned with Nawrocki hopes to
unseat Tusk’s liberal coalition. The president and prime minster are battling
over everything from ambassadorial nominations to undoing PiS’s judicial
reforms, economic policy, foreign affairs, Ukraine, the EU and how to approach
Nawrocki’s ally Donald Trump.
Now the Polish president is turning on SAFE.
Nawrocki this week met with central bank chief Adam Glapiński — who is
sympathetic to PiS — to put forward a “concrete Polish alternative that will not
involve interest payments or loans lasting until 2070,” to create a program
worth around 185 billion złoty — equivalent to the SAFE cash the government is
aiming for.
Nawrocki faces a political decision over the next two weeks on whether to sign
off on government legislation laying out rules for spending the Security Action
For Europe money or to veto it.
The spat in Poland is dismaying the European Commission, which wants member
countries to rapidly boost defense spending to fend off the threat from Russia
and to continue supporting Ukraine.
“Who will lose if Poland doesn’t approve SAFE? Saying no to SAFE is saying no to
jobs for Polish people,” Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius said in Warsaw on
Friday. “If Poland decided to use taxpayers’ money to buy weapons from somewhere
else, that will mean Polish taxpayers money will create jobs elsewhere.”
Nawrocki and PiS claim that euro-denominated SAFE loans will saddle Poland with
decades of debt, create an exchange rate risk and could see Brussels imposing
political conditions on the money’s availability.
They also warn that contracts funded by SAFE could benefit Western European
defense firms — especially those from Germany — rather than domestic producers,
despite the government insisting 80 percent of the cash will stay in Poland.
Embracing SAFE could also anger the U.S., Poland’s main ally and arms supplier,
which has expressed displeasure at the program’s provisions limiting
participation of non-EU countries. Nawrocki is allied with Donald Trump while
Tusk has voiced doubts over Washington’s reliability and predictability.
“Part of it is about signaling to the U.S. that they still have allies in
Poland, part about stirring tensions with Germany, and part about creating
difficulties for Donald Tusk ahead of the election,” said Ben Stanley, a
political scientist at the SWPS University in Warsaw.
PiS has been trending lower in POLITICO’s poll of polls since September, not
long after Nawrocki won the presidential election, which was supposed to give
the party a new powerful momentum.
Nawrocki and PiS claim that euro-denominated SAFE loans will saddle Poland with
decades of debt. | Jakub Porzycki/Anadolu via Getty Images
Trailing by 9 percentage points to Tusk’s Civic Coalition, PiS also has to fight
challenges from the far-right Confederation and the even more extreme
antisemitic Confederation of the Polish Crown. However, polls do show that
Tusk’s party and the other members of his coalition currently would fall short
of winning another term in power.
“My suspicion is that President Nawrocki will eventually sign, but not before
making a great deal of noise and trying to frame the government as having
blocked a more pro-Polish solution,” Stanley said.
However, Nawrocki could also go for broke and try to block the SAFE loan by
pushing his domestic alternative, wrote political scientist Marek Migalski.
“The president’s initiative on ‘Polish SAFE’ is politically astute. It justifies
the veto and gives his supporters an argument against the government, which not
only wants to burden us with debt, but also wants to do so through the evil and
deceitful EU,” he wrote on social media.
Glapiński said Thursday he intends to propose “measures” that would not cut the
country’s foreign currency reserves while securing “tens of billions of złoty”
each year for the state-run Armed Forces Support Fund, a vehicle to finance
military modernization.
Glapiński is hemmed in by legal restrictions limiting the central bank’s ability
to finance the budget, but his messaging suggests the NBP is readying a
large-scale gold selloff. With 550 tons of gold stored in domestic and foreign
vaults, the NBP is one of Europe’s top gold hoarders.
“[The NBP] signals a sell–buyback operation involving the central bank’s gold
reserves. Although it would formally comply with central bank accounting rules,
it could in practice be viewed as risky from the perspective of Poland’s
credibility in financial markets,” ING Bank wrote in an analysis of the
proposal.
“There’s nothing else [the NBP] can do,” a high-ranking government official told
POLITICO, speaking on condition of anonymity, when asked if the plan involves
selling gold.
Tusk on Thursday called on Nawrocki to sign the SAFE law without delay. “Poland,
Polish companies, the employees of those companies and Poland’s security are
waiting for money from the SAFE program … There is no room for any political
games,” the PM said in a video on X.
Tag - State-guaranteed loans
WARSAW — Poland wants to borrow an enormous €43.7 billion under the EU’s
loans-for-arms SAFE program, but that’s running into doubts from the country’s
nationalist President Karol Nawrocki.
Nawrocki has urged caution over Poland’s planned loan — the largest of any
country borrowing under the €150 billion Security Action for Europe scheme —
describing it as “a huge debt that will be repaid by the Polish state for
years.”
That contrasts sharply with the view of pro-EU Prime Minster Donald Tusk, who
said the loans were being issued on “very favorable terms, unavailable on the
market in any other way.”
SAFE provides low-interest, long-term loans with a 10-year grace period for
principal repayments, raised by Brussels on capital markets and offering
significant savings compared to national borrowing.
Those terms are crucial for Poland, which plans to devote 4.8 percent of its GDP
to defense this year, one of the highest levels in NATO. The country’s public
finances are under pressure due to its long-term effort to build up its military
to deter Russia and support Ukraine.
But Nawrocki is wary, and his advisers warn SAFE is aimed at helping Germany
rather than Poland — an appeal to Nawrocki’s core voters who are suspicious of
Berlin.
Poles deserve clarity on costs, conditions and any political strings attached to
SAFE, Nawrocki said during a Wednesday meeting of Poland’s National Security
Council, which he chairs.
“Although SAFE formally operates as a loan mechanism, the indirect risk cannot
be ignored — namely that disbursements could be linked to broader political
conditionality,” the president said. “The final decision on payments and the
terms attached to them will rest with the European Commission.”
Nawrocki also pressed the government to publish the list of all 139 planned
projects to be financed from SAFE and questioned whether the program could
ultimately favor West European defense companies rather than Polish ones.
After the meeting, Tusk warned Nawrocki not to veto the SAFE plan.
“I hope that the doubts and grimaces of disapproval that came up during the
discussion are not a prelude to a veto,” Tusk said before boarding a plane for
an EU leaders’ summit in Belgium.
The government approved a draft law to implement SAFE in Poland on Wednesday.
Tusk and Nawrocki have been at each other’s throats for months as both sides
gear up for a crucial parliamentary election next year. The president has vetoed
several key pieces of legislation, and Tusk’s parliamentary coalition doesn’t
have the votes to override him.
Tusk underlined that 80 percent of the SAFE money would stay in Poland, slamming
the former nationalist Law and Justice government for signing big defense deals
that he said hadn’t given much business to Polish arms firms.
“I did not fully understand what the doubts or uncertainty of the president and
his associates are regarding the added value that SAFE provides,” he said.
Defense Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz said the money could start to flow by
March if the Polish parliament and Nawrocki act in time.
“Now it’s time for efficient work in the parliament and the president’s
signature. We are not paying attention to political spite,” he said on social
media.