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Thursday, 28 March 2024

Pentagon details troop withdraw from Germany

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Pentagon details troop withdraw from Germany
Pentagon details troop withdraw from Germany

The U.S. military unveiled details of its plans on Wednesday to withdraw about 12,000 troops from Germany following a decision by President Donald Trump.

The U.S. said it plans to keep nearly half of them in Europe to address poterntial tensions with Russia.

Adam Reed reports.

The Pentagon is moving forward with its plan to remove a significant number American troops from Germany, and has now unveiled details to keep half of them in Europe as a deterrent against Russia.

Around 12,000 of the 36,000 soldiers in Germany will begin moving out.

Some are heading to the Black Sea region and others in waves to the Baltics.

Italy will see a troop boost as well, and the U.S. is also moving its European headquarters from Germany to Belgium.

Back in June President Donald Trump announced his intention to cut the number of U.S. troops in Germany, for reasons he said include America being taken advantage of on trade.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper on Wednesday (July 29): "These changes will achieve the core principles of enhancing U.S. and NATO deterrence of Russia, strengthening NATO, reassuring allies and improving U.S. strategic flexibility and UCOM operational flexibility." German leaders have appealed to congress to block Trump's withdrawal, while current and former U.S. officials have also criticized the policy as politically, and not strategically driven.

It’s expected moving the majority of the troop will take years, with U.S. officials speaking anonymously saying only a few advanced units would move anytime soon.

Noting as well the whole operation would need potentially billions of dollars in funding.

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