WARSAW — When Poland’s new government laid out its foreign policy priorities, there wasn’t much question who was the country’s leading EU partner. “In the first place, the United Kingdom,” Witold Waszczykowski, the foreign minister, said in a January speech to the Polish parliament, saying that the two countries had a “common perception of European problems.”
So much for that.
Now the nation that most shares Warsaw’s pro-American and market-oriented vision for the EU — the largest nation outside the eurozone besides Poland — is on its way out. Warsaw will be left without an influential ally on issues as varied as …read more
Source: European Voice