

‘United States Obligation to defend our allies It's unwavering. We proceed to consult closely with allies and partners in order to keep and strengthen extended deterrence," said the department spokesperson in a message sent to PAP.
This was the answer to PAP's question, whether the United States is ready to place their atomic weapons in Poland and whether this was the subject of discussions between representatives of the authorities of both countries. “Extended deterrence” — that is the word for the inclusion of allied countries An American atomic umbrella.
Andrew Duda's appeal. J. D. Vance responds. “I would be shocked”
President Andrzej Duda in a Thursday interview with the Financial Times called on the United States to deploy atomic weapons in Poland. He estimated that "the NATO borders moved east in 1999, so 26 years later there should besides be a shift of NATO infrastructure to the east". He expressed hope for an extension of the atomic Sharing task in Europe, which was unsuccessfully proposed by then US president Joe Biden's administration in 2022.
On Thursday asked about this issue in an interview with the Fox News writer Laura Ingraham, Vice president J.D. Vance said, That although he had not discussed it with president Trump, would be ‘shocked’If Trump had supported the atomic movement further east.
— We should be careful, Laura. We are virtually playing with the life of the future of human civilization. This is 1 of the most crucial reasons why president Trump sees himself and is actually the president of peace. We had people like Joe Biden who unconsciously led us towards a atomic conflict. Donald Trump leads us in a completely different direction and we request it," Vance said.
When the Polish president first proposed Poland's accession to the atomic Sharing programme in 2022, the then spokesperson for the Vedant Patel State Department stated that the US was not planning to place atomic weapons in any country that joined NATO after 1997.