US withdrawing 5,000 troops from Germany, officials say

Military vehicles drive during the U.S. Army Combined Resolve exercise at the Army's southern Germany training facilities in Hohenfels, Thursday. The U.S. said it was withdrawing 5,000 troops from the nation on Friday.

Military vehicles drive during the U.S. Army Combined Resolve exercise at the Army's southern Germany training facilities in Hohenfels, Thursday. The U.S. said it was withdrawing 5,000 troops from the nation on Friday. (Angelika Warmuth, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The U.S. will withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany, Pentagon officials announced Friday.
  • The decision follows tensions over the Iran war between President Donald Trump and European leaders.
  • The withdrawal will occur over the next six to 12 months, reducing troop levels to pre-2022 numbers.

WASHINGTON — The United States is withdrawing 5,000 troops from NATO ally Germany, the Pentagon announced on Friday, as a rift ​over the Iran war widens between President Donald Trump and Europe.

Trump had threatened a drawdown in forces earlier this week after sparring with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who said on Monday the Iranians were humiliating the U.S. in ‌talks to end the 2-month-old war and that he did not see what exit strategy Washington was pursuing.

A senior Pentagon official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said recent German ⁠rhetoric had been "inappropriate and unhelpful."

"The president is rightly reacting to ​these counterproductive remarks," the official said.

The Pentagon said the withdrawal was ⁠expected to be completed over the next six to 12 months. Germany is home to some 35,000 active-duty U.S. military personnel, more ‌than anywhere else in Europe.

The ‌official said the drawdown would bring troop levels in Europe back to roughly pre-2022 levels, before Russia's ⁠invasion of Ukraine triggered a buildup by then-President Joe Biden.

The official also cast the ⁠decision in terms of the Trump administration's push for Europe to become the main security provider on the continent. But it is nonetheless another potent reminder of Trump's willingness to respond to perceived disloyalty by allies.

Reuters exclusively reported last week an internal Pentagon email that outlined options to punish NATO allies that Washington believes failed to support U.S. operations in the war with Iran, including suspending Spain from NATO and reviewing the U.S. position on Britain's claim to the Falkland Islands.

German ties fray

Trump has singled out Germany even as he has chastised other NATO allies for not ​sending their navies to help open the Strait of Hormuz during the conflict. The waterway, a chokepoint for global oil shipments, has remained virtually shut, causing market turmoil and unprecedented disruption in energy supplies.

Merz has said Germans and Europeans were not consulted before the U.S. and Israel started attacking Iran on Feb. 28, and that he had conveyed his skepticism about the conflict directly to Trump afterward.

"The president has been very clear about his frustrations about our allies' rhetoric and failure to provide support for U.S. operations that benefit them," the senior Pentagon official said.

Trump has long wanted to reduce the troop ​presence in Germany. He pushed for a reduction at the end of his first term, but that cut was never enacted. Trump lost the election, and Biden ‌reversed the plan.

Trump's ‌Wednesday announcement that he ⁠was reviewing troop levels in Germany surprised German military officials who spoke to Reuters, citing what they called constructive meetings at the Pentagon earlier in the day.

They argue that Germany has done more than other allies to support the U.S. war in Iran, including allowing the use of bases and giving permission for overflights. Germany is also home to a huge military hospital in Landstuhl.

As part of Trump's ‌withdrawal decision, a brigade combat team ​now in Germany will be pulled out of the country, and a long-range ‌fires battalion that the Biden administration ⁠had planned to begin ​deploying to Germany later this year will no longer deploy, the official said.

Contributing: Andrea Shalal

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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