Berlin: After more than a year of thinly-veiled threats to start pulling US troops out of Germany unless Berlin increases its defence spending, President Donald Trump appears to be proceeding with a hardball approach, planning to cut the US military contingent by more than 25%.
About 34,500 American troops are stationed in Germany — 50,000 including civilian Department of Defence employees — and the plan Trump reportedly signed off on last week envisions reducing active-duty personnel to 25,000 by September, with further cuts possible.
But as details of the still-unannounced plan trickle out, there's growing concerns it will do more to harm the US' own global military readiness and the NATO alliance than punish Germany.
The decision was not discussed with Germany or other NATO members, and Congress was not officially informed — prompting a letter from 22 Republican members of the House Armed Services Committee urging a rethink.
"The threats posed by Russia have not lessened, and we believe that signs of a weakened US commitment to NATO will encourage further Russian aggression and opportunism," Rep. Mac Thornberry of Texas wrote in a letter to Trump with his colleagues. Sen. Jack Reed, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, slammed Trump's move as "another favour" to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
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But Richard Grenell, who resigned as US ambassador to Germany two weeks ago, told Berlin's Bild newspaper that "nobody should be surprised that Donald Trump is withdrawing troops".
Grenell, who declined to comment for this article, said he and others had been pushing for Germany to increase its defence spending and had talked about troop withdrawals since last summer.
"Donald Trump was very clear we want to bring troops home," he said, adding: "there's still going to be 25,000 American troops in Germany."
The suggestion that removing troops will punish Germany, however, overlooks the fact that American troops are no longer primarily there for the country's defence, said retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, who commanded US Army Europe from 2014 until 2017.
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Gone are the days when hundreds of thousands of American troops were ready to fight in the streets of Berlin or rush into the strategic Fulda Gap, through which Soviet armor was poised to push into West Germany during the Cold War.
"The troops and capabilities that the US has deployed in Europe are not there to specifically defend Germany, they are part of our contribution to overall collective stability and security in Europe," said Hodges, now a strategic expert with the Center for European Policy Analysis, a Washington-based institute.
American facilities include Ramstein Air Base, a critical hub for operations in the Mideast and Africa and headquarters to the US Air Forces in Europe and Africa; the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, which has saved the lives of countless Americans wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan; and the Stuttgart headquarters of both the US European Command and the US Africa Command. There's also the Wiesbaden headquarters of US Army Europe, the Spangdahlem F-16 fighter base and the Grafenwoehr Training Area, NATO's largest training facility in Europe.