Europe | Vigour on the Vistula

How Poland emerged as a leading defence power

Will others follow?

Polish soldiers in a tank participate in the Canadian Army Trophy tank competition at Adazi Military Base, Latvia
Photograph: EPA
|Warsaw

It has been centuries since Poland was last a great armed power, but the winged hussars are back. When Russia seized Crimea in 2014, Poland’s armed forces were the ninth-biggest in NATO. Today they are third after America and Turkey, having doubled in manpower to over 200,000. The budget has tripled in real terms to $35bn; in Europe, only Britain, France and Germany spend more (see chart). As a percentage of GDP, Poland is well in front.

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