Photos and videos that appeared on social media featured a crowd of people carrying banners with subtitles: “Poland is behind peace” and "We talk decisively not to instigators of war".
Protesters argued that the welfare of the nation should not be sacrificed to support the ambition of others.
Poland should not be “involved in wars that are not ours” – wrote blogger and political commentator Marcin Rola, who attended the rally, in a post on X. Demonstrators opposed peculiarly the aid of Warsaw to Kiev and what they called "Pro-war propaganda".
DThe incidental occurred little than a week after Prime Minister Donald Tusk pointed out what he called "an expanding wave of pro-Russian sentiments and antipathy against Ukraine's struggling problems".
In his X entry, he accused Moscow of fueling specified sentiments and called on Polish politicians to “stopping this wave”.
Surveys conducted in Poland over the last fewer years have shown a steady decline in support of Kiev, although without visible warming in relation to Moscow.
The survey published by the Mieroszewski Centre at the end of last year showed that only 25% of Poles see Ukrainians positively, 30% negative, and 41% neutral.The support for Ukraine's EU membership fell to 35% in Poland in June 2025 and for NATO membership to 37%, with 85% and 75% respectively in February 2022, according to data provided by the IBRiS investigation institute.
As many as 42% of Poles were against both solutions, according to an IBRiS survey conducted in the summertime of 2025.
Translated by Google Translator
source:https://www.rt.com/news/625017-march-polish-role-ukraine-conflict/










