WARSAW: An aide to Poland’s President Andrzej Duda said Friday that if Georgette Mosbacher is appointed as the new US ambassador to Poland, she will be accepted, despite having made “unnecessary and mistaken” comments about the country.
Mosbacher, a businesswoman nominated by President Donald Trump, attributed the rise of anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe to a law passed in Poland in January that criminalizes blaming Poland for Holocaust crimes committed by occupying Nazi Germany. The law drew angry reactions from Israel, which in turn triggered a wave of anti-Semitic rhetoric in Poland.
Warsaw has objected to comments that Mosbacher made Tuesday during a nomination hearing before the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Krzysztof Szczerski said Friday that Duda will officially accept her credentials if she comes to Warsaw as the ambassador of Poland’s close ally.
If Mosbacher is sent to Poland “the president will accept her credentials despite those statements … which we find to be unnecessary and simply mistaken as far as the analysis of the situation goes,” Szczerski said on radio RMF FM.
Szczerski said Mosbacher will have a “much more nuanced opinion, a true opinion” that after she spends some time in Poland.
Mosbacher’s other remarks to the commission stressing the importance of the two countries’ strategic alliance and of joint plans, were fully in line with Warsaw’s views, Szczerski added.