WARSAW, Poland — Government leaders of Poland and Germany held consultations Tuesday aimed at giving a new impulse to bilateral relations that sagged under Poland's previous government and to jointly declare responsibility for Europe's security in turbulent times.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz traveled with 12 ministers and government officials, including Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, for the meeting in Warsaw.
''We bring a very clear message: Germany and Poland are good neighbors, close partners and reliable friends. And we want to create a new dynamic for our cooperation,'' Scholz told a joint news conference with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk.
He stressed that ''close partnership between Germany and Poland is very important to us.''
The two pro-European leaders were tightening ties at a time when support is surging in Europe for eurosceptic far-right parties and days after a first round of parliamentary elections in France brought the far right there closer than ever to government.
''We are sure that, regardless of the result of the second round of parliamentary elections in France, the cooperation between the president of France and Donald and myself will be very good and will be the foundation of cooperation of our three countries,'' Scholz said.
Tusk said that "regardless of the results of elections in various EU countries, the EU should not become exposed to any excessive turbulence."
It is important that ''moderate forces, forces that are reasonable, pro-European ... find wise, convincing responses to what have become the priorities for ordinary people: the efficient fight against illegal migration, security, increasing economic self-sufficiency'' and Europe's greater assertiveness in defending its interest in the world, Tusk said.