rbtfl.
Warsaw strips Zelensky of its highest honour; Tusk fights to contain the fallout

Warsaw strips Zelensky of its highest honour; Tusk fights to contain the fallout

A WWII-memory rupture pits President Nawrocki against PM Tusk and Kyiv, with Moscow the only clear winner

Leaders· worsening Qui décide·Ce qu'ils ne disent pas ·8 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

On 19 June 2026 Polish President Karol Nawrocki revoked the Order of the White Eagle from Volodymyr Zelensky, retaliating against a 26 May decree that named a Ukraine Special Operations unit after the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) — held in Poland responsible for the 1943–45 Volhynia massacres of Poles. Zelensky mailed the order back on 20 June; Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha and intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov returned their Polish honours, calling the move a "gift to Moscow." PM Donald Tusk appealed to both sides "not to waste" wartime solidarity, warning of a "strategic mistake," and Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski said only Moscow wins a "war of medals." Russia's Dmitry Medvedev seized on it, branding Ukraine's ex-presidents "Nazis."

The split

Ukrainian outlets (Ukrainska Pravda, Kyiv Post) foreground the Moscow-benefits framing and Tusk's restraint, separating Poland's pro-Kyiv government from its nationalist president. Al Jazeera reads it as a wartime-alliance downgrade. Russian voices diverge by design: TASS weaponises it for the "denazification" narrative, while exiled Meduza treats it as a self-inflicted Western wound without Kremlin triumphalism. Western wires stress the historical-memory trigger over the live cohabitation fight in Warsaw.

By the numbers

  • Up to 100,000 — Polish deaths attributed to the UPA in Volhynia, 1943–45.
  • 26 May 2026 — Zelensky's decree naming the unit "Heroes of the UPA."
  • 19 June — Nawrocki's revocation of the Order of the White Eagle.
  • 2023 — year then-President Duda had awarded Zelensky the order.
  • 13 minutes — length of Nawrocki's social-media address announcing the move.

Why it matters

The rupture splits Poland's executive — a pro-Ukraine Tusk government against a PiS-backed president — at a moment when Warsaw is Kyiv's principal logistics and arms conduit. A memory dispute now threatens the practical machinery of Western support, exactly the wedge Moscow seeks.

What to watch

  • Whether Kyiv amends or reframes the UPA unit naming.
  • Tusk–Nawrocki cohabitation friction spilling into Ukraine-policy decisions.
  • Any disruption to Polish transit of arms and aid into Ukraine.
  • Further Russian amplification ahead of EU sanctions and aid votes.