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Round The World
New Delhi, 7 November 2025
EU Russia Policy
DELHI, WARSAW ANGLE
By Bruno Surdel
(Expert, Centre for International Relations,
Poland)
Europe in 2025 has faced a complex puzzle: how to maintain pressure on
Moscow while responding to unpredictable US–Russia diplomacy under President Donald
Trump. Recall, the high-stakes Trump–Putin summit in Anchorage in mid-August,
framed as a reset but yielding little clarity, had left EU capitals watching
anxiously. Since then, the American tone towards Moscow has fluctuated between
pressure and rapprochement, unsettling allies who fear that engagement may look
like appeasement.
Now the US has cancelled the planned Trump-Putin summit in Budapest after
Russia’s firm stance on Ukraine. The American President says he’s not going to meet
Putin unless a peace deal is near, underscoring how fragile the
Washington-Moscow dynamic remains and how directly its tremors now reach
Europe.
Europe’s anxious interlude
On 15 August 2025, President Trump and President Vladimir Putin held a
high-stakes summit in Alaska. The meeting was billed as a chance to break the
impasse over Ukraine, with Trump expressing that he expected Moscow to make
concessions in return for a rollback of certain sanctions. But the result was
ambiguous: Putin insisted Crimea stay Russian and demanded guarantees or
neutral status for Ukraine. Trump, meanwhile, was vague about timing and
conditions, sidestepping any guarantee of new sanctions.
European analysts greeted the summit with caution. Some saw it as President
Trump attempting to reset American engagement with Russia on his terms. Others
worried that Moscow could exploit a US–Russia detente to divide Europe.
Importantly, the summit served as a signal: Trump’s transactional diplomacy, in
which deals are shaped quickly and opportunistically, injects new uncertainty
into the European security calculus. Some in Europe fret that Putin may court the
US to reduce Western sanctions pressure, thereby peeling away European
leverage.
European reaction: more sanctions
In response to new US–Russia engagement, Europe has been pursuing a
multi-track line: retain maximum sanctions pressure, strengthen its own defence
posture, and seek to preserve diplomatic space.
Beginning of October, the European Parliament passed a call for a “unified
EU response” to Russian provocations, including further sanctions and
counter-measures to hybrid warfare at the borders of the Union. Several EU
capitals reaffirmed their opposition to any deal that rewards Russian
aggression or weakens the sanctions regime.
Germany, France, and Italy have urged greater caution, emphasizing that
engagements with Russia, direct or mediated through third parties, should not
undermine unity or be exploited by Moscow. In many European capitals, the fear
is that President Trump’s unpredictable and mercurial diplomacy could isolate
Ukraine and pressure the European Union to “normalize” relations without robust
guarantees.
Many analysts argue that Europe must move from declarative unity to hard
instruments: accelerated arms procurement, deeper integration of national
defence systems, and tighter coordination with NATO.
Poland’s posture: tough deterrence
Poland, given its proximity to Russia and Belarus, is among the hardest hit
when the strategic equilibrium wobbles. In 2025, Warsaw has insisted that
Europe must not allow US–Russia talks to erode the position of Ukraine or
dilute collective sanctions. For Poland, any softening toward Moscow is
existential.
Warsaw has also accused Moscow of hybrid tactics—using drones, cyberattacks
and clandestine sabotage—to probe NATO’s resolve. Indeed, the early September
2025 Russian drone incursion into Poland (19 to 23 drones crossing into Polish
airspace) heightened Warsaw’s fears that the Kremlin is testing thresholds.
Poland invoked Article 4 of NATO and pressed for rapid air policing support.
In parallel, Warsaw has rejected narratives that it obstructs EU unity on
Russia. Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel claimed Poland and the Baltic
states had blocked talks with Putin, a charge Warsaw firmly denied as it sees
itself not as a spoiler but as a guardian of principle and consistency.
Domestically, Warsaw has moved to strengthen its internal resilience:
bolstering counterintelligence, passing laws to intercept drone incursions, and
closing sections of its border with Belarus after drone routes were traced
through Belarusian airspace. That closure disrupted rail traffic, including
China–EU freight, underscoring how Poland acts when it believes the threat is
imminent.
What India should watch in Europe–Russia dynamics
From New Delhi’s perspective, Europe’s contest over Russia diplomacy
carries several lessons and potential leverage points.
First, Europe’s determination to maintain sanctions and deterrence sometimes
despite US diplomacy shows that soft power and economic tools matter. India,
too, must consider how trade, finance and norms can be part of strategic
posture.
Second, Polish insistence both on the strategic alliance with Washington
and the European capabilities offers a model: Warsaw does not depend entirely
on US grand bargains but builds capacity and voice within multilateral systems.
Third, in times when superpowers negotiate, regional actors become
critical—Europe is pushing its own agenda even as at times President Trump
courts Putin. India, in Asia’s relations with China and other powers, should
aim to be that agenda shaper.
In the end, President Trump’s preference for deals over principles serves
as a reminder to democracies everywhere: strategic foundations -- alliances,
treaty commitments, and defence preparedness -- cannot be traded for short-term
diplomatic gains. Poland’s stance in this regard remains firm and articulate, both
a warning and an example in a world where diplomacy itself can be rewritten overnight.---INFA
(Copyright, India News & Feature Alliance)
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