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An Ethnic Ukrainian Lobby Might Soon Take Shape In The Polish Sejm | Andrew Korybko

  • Independent News Roundup By Independent News Roundup
  • Oct 8, 2025

Poland’s territorial integrity and possibly even its statehood could be threatened if the authorities don’t thwart this scenario by at the very least amending the Citizenship Law and then “creatively coercing” most of this community into re-migrating to Ukraine.

Andrew Korybko

“European Pravda” predicted in a recent article about “How Nawrocki wants to make life harder for Ukrainians in Poland” that “as early as 2027, Ukrainian migrants may have the chance to secure their own political representation in the Sejm.” This migrant community of two million people might not have the chance, however, if President Karol Nawrocki’s proposed amendment to the Citizenship Law passes and it then takes ten years instead of three years of residence with a long-term permit to apply for this.

Nawrocki’s move might be outwardly motivated by an attempt to tap into rising populist sentiment ahead of fall 2027’s next parliamentary elections that the conservative-nationalists who he represents hope will return them to power but there are arguably security dimensions to this too. This analysis here from last fall briefs the reader about the threat that ultra-nationalist Ukrainians could pose to Poland’s territorial integrity given that they consider today’s southeastern Poland to historically be theirs.

If a significant number of Poland’s two-million-strong Ukrainian migrant community speedily obtains citizenship through the current law, and especially if enough of them relocate to what they regard as their “ancestral lands”, then an ethno-separatist lobby could eventually form in the Sejm. This could in turn be exploited by their titular neighboring state as a means of meddling in Poland’s domestic affairs and even destabilizing the country if Warsaw doesn’t bend to Kiev’s future demands in that scenario.

Observers shouldn’t forget that former Polish President Andrzej Duda warned earlier in the year that “Ukraine’s Traumatized Troops Could Pose A Security Threat To All Of Europe” if there aren’t any restrictions on their entry into the EU. Some of them are highly trained, including when it comes to operating dangerous FPV drones, which raises the risk of “fifth column” terrorist-separatist attacks inside Poland if Ukraine one day weaponizes some of its veteran compatriots there to this end.

To make matters more worrisome, “The Ukrainian Ambassador To Poland Admitted That His Co-Ethnics Don’t Want To Assimilate”, which happened just last month. Between then and “European Pravda’s” recent prediction about “[Ukraine’s] own political representation in the Sejm”, the Ukrainian Embassy in Poland warned of “retaliatory measures” if Nawrocki’s proposal to criminalize Banderism passes. While likely nothing too ominous for now, it could in the future involve the abovementioned scenario.

Quite clearly, Poland’s two-million-strong Ukrainian migrant community poses a latent security threat, one that’ll become all the more acute than it already is with the increasingly bold ultra-nationalists who flooded into the country since 2022 if traumatized veterans follow them after the war ends. Leaving the Citizenship Law unchanged risks giving this group legal levers that might be exploited by Kiev for hybrid war purposes that essentially serve as a Damocles’ sword for subordinating Poland to Ukraine.

Poland’s territorial integrity and possibly even its statehood could therefore be threatened if the authorities don’t thwart this scenario by at the very least amending the Citizenship Law and then “creatively coercing” most of this community into re-migrating to Ukraine. Poland aspires to restore its Great Power status, which largely depends on subordinating Ukraine, but Ukraine might flip the tables and ultimately become a Great Power instead if it weaponizes its compatriots to subordinate Poland.

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