Interesting-Poles supported ideology, which counted them as subhumans? It makes as much sense as Nazi Jews.
I don't know if they were Nazis, but there were certainly Jews in the Nazi Wehrmacht.
http://www.kansaspress.ku.edu/righit.html
And there are/were Jewish Nazis in Poland.
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/09/23/poland.jewish/
And there are Nazis in Israel today.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/6985808.stm
I think the point of generic Nazi ideology is to count your own group as superior, whether you are ethnically Jewish or Polish or Norwegian doesn't matter, its always your own group that is the best.
In Nazi Germany you had the German Vanguard, the German-Jewish followers of Hitler led by Hans Joachim Schoeps, also referred to as "Nazi Jews", who advocated loyalty to the Nazi programme, and allegedly ended their meetings by giving the Nazi salute and shouting, "Down With Us!"
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,757240-1,00.html
The same Time article, from 1936, contained the following:
"Profoundly disapproving of the Zionist policy of discrimination against Arab labor, he concluded that Jewish nationalism encouraged Arab nationalism, while the depressing of Arab wages made conflict inevitable. Jews who had been persecuted in Germany now persecuted Arabs and preached a doctrine of racial purity as relentless as the one under which they had suffered. A little dizzy from following this vicious circle all the way around, Gessner came reluctantly to a doubtful conclusion: "If we can't get along with the Arabs, we have failed."
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,757240-2,00.html
Another article in Time, this time from late 1948, contained the following:
"They talked confidently—indeed, stridently—of a state of ten million, not necessarily confined to the present boundaries of Israel. It was a bad joke, and also a sober observation, that the idea of Drang nach Osten lived in the new nation of Hitler's victims.
As they looked around them at a disorganized and unproductive Arab world, Israelis showed some of the reactions of the prewar Germans looking around a disorganized and unproductive Europe. The new blood of nationalism ran fast and hot in Israel; sometimes it seemed to be gushing out on the ground. Pleading for more understanding and tolerance of Israel, one sympathetic observer warned: "This could become an ugly little Spartan state.""
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,798932,00.html