BERLIN — Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Monday clashed over war reparations
and restitution for Germany’s Nazi-era destruction of Poland.
The open disagreement between two leaders — who have vowed to mend often-strained relations between their two countries
— cast a shadow over talks in Berlin that were meant to project unity and cooperation on a range of issues, including
defense and support for Ukraine. Instead, the two leaders spent time sparring over the highly emotional issue of how
Germany should attempt to make up for its actions during World War II.
“We must keep memories alive, even painful ones,” Merz said alongside Tusk. “I hope that we can do this in a way that
does not divide us, but brings us closer together.”
But Tusk, under pressure from the opposition nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party, took a harder line on the matter
than he has in the past, criticizing Germany’s logic for refusing to pay war reparations to Poland.
“We in Poland all believe that Poland has not received compensation for the losses and crimes of World War II,” Tusk
After his reelection in 2023, Tusk had not highlighted the reparations demands of the previous PiS government, which
called on Germany to pay €1.3 trillion for its 1939-1945 occupation of Poland. Berlin has repeatedly said the matter is
But on Monday, Tusk reopened the issue, criticizing the German argument that Poland waived its right to reparations in
the 1950s when it was under the control of the Soviet Union.
PiS politicians, including Poland’s current president, Karol Nawrocki, argue the waiver was made under Soviet pressure
and can’t be taken at face value. On Monday, Tusk echoed that line.
“Germany is adhering to this formal diplomatic agreement from the 1950s,” Tusk said. “Those who know history know that
in the 1950s, Poland had no say in the matter. And Poland’s waiver of reparations is not seen as an act that reflects
the opinion of the Polish people. The Polish people had no say.”
The renewed tensions over reparations threaten to complicate the two leaders’ efforts to smooth over differences on a
range of issues, from disputes on national border controls to Berlin’s investigation of explosions that crippled the
undersea Nord Stream pipelines carrying Russian gas to Germany.
Tusk’s government has frequently made the case that, while there is a moral case for reparations, there is no way to
legally make Berlin pay and therefore, pursing the matter only undermines Poland’s ties with Germany, its largest
At the same time, Merz came to office vowing to improve relations with Poland, traveling to Warsaw on his first full-day
on office. Merz then said he saw the so-called Weimar Triangle — an informal alliance between Germany, Poland and France
— as a potential engine for shaping a more robust European defense strategy.
On Monday, Merz’s government announced a series of other steps designed to ease Polish resentments over Berlin’s refusal
to pay reparations, though those measures were unlikely to placate many Poles.
Merz said Germany would press ahead with plans to construct a memorial dedicated to Polish victims of Nazi Germany in
Berlin, and his government vowed to return Polish cultural artifacts plundered by the Nazis.
Germany also pledged to “examine possibilities of providing further support to Polish victims of the Nazi aggression,”
according to a joint declaration.
That pledge alluded to a proposal by former Chancellor Olaf Scholz to financially compensate still-living Polish victims
of Nazi Germany. But the plan has yet to materialize.
Tusk expressed frustration about this on Monday, arguing time is running out.
“When I discussed this with Chancellor Scholz, the figure [of people who were still alive] was just over 60,000,” said
Tusk. “Today it is 50,000 people.”
“Please, please speed things up if you really want to make this gesture,” he said, adding that if Berlin doesn’t move
faster, then Warsaw will use its own money to compensate victims.
Despite the disagreement, Merz and Tusk said they are in close contact over developments in Ukraine and negotiations
over a possible peace deal.
Tusk called the level of cooperation “truly unprecedented” and warned of the risk of playing up divisions between the
“We have radicals on both sides of the border” who are “interested in stirring up anti-German sentiment in Poland and
anti-Polish sentiment and moods in Germany,” he said. “But I am convinced that they will not be able to achieve their