WARSAW, Poland — NATO member Poland paid tribute Thursday to its historic 1920 victory over the Red Army by honoring fallen Poles and showing off modern tanks and other equipment that it hopes will deter the threat it sees in modern-day Russia.
More than 2,500 Polish troops, joined by dozens of U.S. and other allied soldiers, rode in military vehicles or tanks, or flew in fighter jets and helicopters in Warsaw, the Polish capital, on the Armed Forces Day holiday.
''We must arm ourselves and build such potential that no one will ever dare to attack us,'' President Andrzej Duda said before the parade, the culmination of state commemorations.
Some of Poland's new weapons have replaced Soviet- and Russian-made equipment sent to neighboring Ukraine after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of its democratic neighbor on Feb. 24, 2022. Since Poland broke free of Moscow's control starting in 1989 and then joined NATO, it has worked to modernize its army.
Those efforts moved into higher gear after Russia, under President Vladimir Putin, first invaded parts of Ukraine in 2014, and then began its full-fledged assault in 2022, with fears heightened all along the strategic stretch of NATO's eastern flank — from the Baltic nations to Poland to Romania.
''Muscovites always threatened the peace here,'' said Radoslaw Prokop, a 49-year-old who watched the parade. ''For hundreds of years.''
U.S., British and Romanian soldiers riding in tanks with their national flags waving joined their Polish allies. They are here ''at our invitation,'' Duda said in his speech, recalling how ''in the past there were those here whom we did not invite, who came here by force.''
Jacek Szelenbaum, a 60-year-old truck driver, was among the thousands of spectators. His grandfather was forced to serve in a mounted infantry division of the Russian czar in the early 20th century, the waning years of a long Russian occupation over Warsaw and the surrounding region of Poland.