Nawrocki represented Poland in a video conference between European leaders, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Trump on Wednesday.
The talks came ahead of Trump’s scheduled Friday meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska.
Initiated by Germany, Wednesday’s discussions aimed to present a unified European position on ending the war in Ukraine.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz hosted Zelensky in Berlin earlier that day.
In a joint declaration agreed earlier this week, 26 European Union leaders stressed there could be no path to peace without Ukraine.
They said any diplomatic solution must also protect Europe’s security interests and include guarantees enabling Ukraine to defend itself effectively.
Hungary did not sign the statement.
Przydacz said Nawrocki repeated Poland’s long-standing position that Europe’s borders must not be determined by Russia and that any settlement must involve Ukraine directly.
“Only through firm language and concrete, tough actions can we stop the Russian Federation,” Przydacz said, adding that Ukraine’s participation in final decisions was essential.
The president's office confirmed Nawrocki’s participation after earlier confusion.
Government spokesman Adam Szłapka had initially indicated that Prime Minister Donald Tusk would join the call with Trump.
Szłapka later clarified that three separate conversations on Ukraine were taking place that day. Tusk joined a small-format meeting with Zelensky to prepare the European stance before the Trump-Putin talks. Nawrocki took part in the second discussion with Trump and Zelensky, and Tusk attended a third, broader leaders’ meeting.
(rt/gs)
Source: IAR, PAP