Poland will exercise caution regarding a new large-scale package of military aid to Ukraine, which NATO countries plan to announce at the summit in Ankara. This was stated by Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk in Warsaw on Friday, July 3. According to him, he conveyed this position of the Polish government to the country's president, Karol Nawrocki, who will represent Warsaw at the upcoming NATO summit. At the same time, Tusk expressed overall support for further assistance to Ukraine while also pointing out his country's commitments in the European Union and the North Atlantic Alliance to defend against Russia and Belarus. "Ukraine needs financial support," he acknowledged. "But Poland must defend the eastern border of the EU." **Plan for New NATO Military Aid** On the same day, it became known that NATO countries had prepared a new large-scale package of military aid to Ukraine, which they plan to announce at the summit in Ankara on July 7-8. Representatives of 32 alliance members approved a plan on July 3 to allocate at least 70 billion euros per year for military equipment, support, and military training to Ukraine in 2026 and 2027. This aid program includes a previously adopted package of military support from the EU, under which Kyiv will receive about 60 billion euros for defense spending by the end of 2027. Thus, NATO countries agreed to add about 80 billion euros from national budgets to this amount. **Conflict Between Ukraine and Poland** In recent weeks, a diplomatic conflict has continued between Kyiv and Warsaw due to the decision of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to name one of the units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine after the "heroes of the UPA (Ukrainian Insurgent Army)." This move by Kyiv was sharply criticized in Warsaw, which is one of Ukraine's main allies in defending against the Russian invasion. In Poland, the UPA is primarily associated with the Volhynian massacre - the mass murder of Poles during World War II. Warsaw officially recognized these events as genocide. In response to Zelensky's actions, Polish President Karol Nawrocki stripped him of Poland's highest award - the Order of the White Eagle. Following Zelensky, several of his associates returned the awards given by Poland, and a number of politicians in Poland returned Ukrainian state awards to Kyiv. Among them is the leader of the national-conservative Law and Justice party (PiS), Jarosław Kaczyński, who also called on the government to block negotiations on Ukraine's accession to the EU. At the end of June, it became known that Poland refused to transfer MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine, as reported by "Deutsche Welle."