Poland revamping military, more than doubling its army to counter Russian threat: report

As war between Russia and Ukraine rages next door, Poland has been ramping up defense spending and modernizing its outdated military equipment. 

Worried they could one day be in the crosshairs of the Kremlin, Poland aims to spend 4% of its GDP on defense this year. That’s double the NATO requirement and would make Poland the biggest spender per capita on defense in the military alliance. 

Plans to modernize its equipment were underway before Russian forces invaded Ukraine in February 2022. But the invasion sped up that process.

"The criminal assault carried out by the Russian Federation, targeting Ukraine, and the unpredictable nature of Putin means that we need to accelerate the equipment modernization even further," Mariusz Blaszczak, Poland’s defense minister, told the Defence24portal. 

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"It is of key importance to increase the levels of security as fast as possible for Poland. We can do this only by creating a strong military. Strong enough to deter any potential aggressor from deciding to attack." 

Poland has ordered 1,000 K2 main battle tanks from South Korea and 250 M1A2 SEPv3 Abram Tanks from the U.S., The Telegraph reported. Another 600 K9s, 18 HIMARS launchers and 288 K239 Chunmoo MRL systems from South Korea are expected to arrive. 

Meanwhile, the country is planning to more than double the size of its army to 300,000 troops – effectively making it the largest military – in terms of manpower – west of Ukraine. 

"We are perceived as those who guarantee security on NATO’s eastern flank," Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki commented at recent NATO training. 

"This is why our efforts to strengthen the army through arms purchases go hand-in-hand with strengthening NATO’s presence on the eastern flank." 

Senators seek to block Ford Motors from working with Chinese battery company: 'I'll be damned'

Democrat and Republican senators are working together to block Ford Motor Co. from using Chinese technology to make batteries for American electric vehicles, raising concerns over ties with the Chinese Communist Party.

Ford Motor Co. is currently working on a billion dollar deal that includes working with Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Limited (CATL), a Chinese battery manufacturer, to make batteries for new cars in the United States. 

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., stressed a 12% royalty on sales would be given to CATL. 

"I'll be damned if I'm going to give them $900 out of $7,500, to let it go to China for basically a product we started," Manchin told the CERAWeek energy conference. "You're telling me we don't have the smart people and the technology, and we can't get up to speed quick enough? That doesn't make sense."

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Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., recently introduced the "Restricting Electric Vehicle Outlays from Kleptomaniac Enemies (Revoke) Act of 2023," a bipartisan bill that seeks to block companies from receiving electric vehicle tax credits from corporations with foreign entities of concern.

Rubio claims that if the deal proceeds, it "will only deepen U.S. reliance on the Chinese Communist Party for battery tech, and is likely designed to make the factory eligible for Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) tax credits."

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Ford is seeking to build a $3.5 billion battery plant in Michigan as part of the new deal.

Ford defended the deal, claiming that "making those batteries here at home is much better than continuing to rely exclusively on foreign-imports, as other auto companies do. A wholly owned Ford subsidiary alone will build, own and operate this plant. No other entity will get U.S. tax dollars for this project."