With Mideast meeting, Poland woos Trump but risks other ties Poland hopes Mideast meeting helps it secure US 'Fort Trump' on its soil but it has angered Iran and adds another blow to EU unity

WARSAW, Poland -- The Polish government has joined forces with the United States to co-host an international conference on the Middle East, hoping to strengthen its ties with Washington as its seeks greater protection from Russia.

But other longstanding relationships are being tested.

Iran's government, which views the conference as a hostile act, warns there will be consequences for Poland. Some political observers also fear the Polish government is risking greater isolation in Europe by aligning itself with Washington on an issue where the key European powers strongly oppose U.S. President Donald Trump's policies.

"What worries me is that the Polish government is putting its eggs almost completely in Trump's basket. Not even the U.S. basket, but Trump's basket. The bet on Trump goes quite far," said Piotr Buras, the director of the Warsaw office of the European Council on Foreign Relations. "All of this is at the expense of relations with EU partners, and even at the expense of NATO unity."

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini and the foreign ministers of key European powers, including Russia, are staying away from the "Ministerial to Promote a Future of Peace and Security in the Middle East" on Wednesday and Thursday in Warsaw. The hosts are U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Polish Foreign Minister Jacek Czaputowicz.

Other high-ranking attendees are U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The event comes as Poland is lobbying the United States for a U.S. base on its territory. That would follow rotational deployments to NATO's eastern flank and more exercises in the region following Russia's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.

Polish leaders ideally would like a permanent U.S. base and have said it could be called "Fort Trump," though other options, including beefing up the already existing rotations, are seen as more realistic. The Pentagon is expected to reveal its assessment in March. Approval of any new deployment falls to Congress.

Czaputowicz said last week that Poland agreed to host the conference because it wants to "show the world that we are active in ensuring peace and stability."

He added: "I hope that this will translate into an increase in trust between our countries, as well as a stronger involvement of the United States in Poland."

Poland's government has for some time said it would like to take on the role of mediator between the United States and the EU on the issue of Iran.

Polish officials were reportedly taken off guard when Pompeo announced during a visit to Cairo in January that the conference would take place in Warsaw and would include "an important element of making sure that Iran is not a destabilizing influence."

Before that, Poland had informed Iran of plans to host the meeting and Tehran did not protest, not considering it a threat, according to a report Friday in the Rzeczpospolita daily.

"Pompeo ruined everything," the Iranian ambassador to Poland, Masoud Edrisi Kermanshahi, was quoted as saying in the report.

It would not be the first time Poland has suffered fallout from helping the United States.

When Poland and other Central European countries supported the administration of George W. Bush in 2003 during the buildup to the war in Iraq, a huge gulf opened up between them and nations in Western Europe that opposed the war.

Polish leaders also faced criticism and controversy when it emerged years later that they had agreed to host a CIA black site where terror suspects were held and abused from 2002-03.

Radek Sikorski, a former Polish foreign minister who has been critical of what he sees as Polish subservience to the U.S., says the conference could strengthen the Polish-American alliance but also leave Poland diplomatically isolated in the EU.

He said he believes Trump wants to use Poland to break up the EU because he sees it as the main economic threat to the U.S.

"In this sense, American policies are a bit like Russian" policies, Sikorski said.

That is not a position all experts agree on.

"That might be the effect, but I don't necessarily think it's the intent," said Wojciech Przybylski, the editor of Visegrad Insight magazine, which focuses on Central Europe.

He said the Polish ruling party has since 2016 sought to use its close ties to Washington to become a mediator between the U.S. and the EU in solving conflicts in the Middle East.

But so far that hasn't happened, in part because Poland's standing has suffered over rule-of-law issues, "and also because Donald Trump's confrontational approach made it even more difficult for European leaders to accept," he said.