From Military.com:
“Nearly 12,000 US Troops Will
Pull Out of Germany at Cost of Billions, SecDef Says”
Nearly 12,000 U.S. troops will be
withdrawn or repositioned from Germany, with more than half of them returning
to the U.S., under a long-term plan aimed at strengthening NATO's eastern
flanks against Russia, Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Wednesday. He gave no
overall timetable for when the pullout would begin or be completed, but said
some units could start moving "within weeks" while the withdrawal of
others will depend on working out agreements with allies. However, "no
moves will take place without thorough communication with our people"
affected by the withdrawals and with Congress, Esper said. Last month,
President Donald Trump directed that 9,500 troops be withdrawn from Germany,
but Esper said the overall strategy requires the pullout and repositioning of
11,900, reducing the number of U.S. service members in Germany to about 24,000.
Of the 11,900 troops, about 6,400
will eventually return to the U.S. and the rest will be repositioned in other
NATO countries, with an emphasis on Poland, the Baltic states and the Black Sea
region to shift NATO's force posture more to the east, Esper said. The bulk of
the troops returning to the U.S. will consist of the 4,500 members of the
Army's 2nd Cavalry Regiment, a Stryker unit now garrisoned in Vilseck, Germany,
he added. Esper said an unspecified fighter squadron and elements of a fighter
wing now stationed in Germany will be moved to Italy. In addition, the Army's
newly established 5th Corps headquarters is slated to move into Poland, and
other units are being considered for stationing in Poland and the Baltic
states, he continued. The 2,500 airmen now stationed at the U.K.'s RAF
Mildenhall, who had been scheduled to reposition to Germany, will now stay put,
Esper said. He had no immediate figures for the costs of the withdrawal, but
said it could be in the "single digit" billions. Esper said the
Defense Department will rely on the service branches to "assure the
stability" of military families who will be making permanent
change-of-station moves under the sweeping reorganization, adding that the
families will be "informed well in advance" of any moves. The SecDef
outlined the plan at a Pentagon briefing with Air Force Gen. John Hyten, vice
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Air Force Gen. Tod Wolters, who
doubles as NATO supreme commander and head of U.S. European Command. Under the
plan, Wolters said his own EUCOM headquarters will move from Stuttgart,
Germany, to Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) in Mons, Belgium.
He added that EUCOM's Special Operations Command headquarters in Stuttgart will
also move to Mons. Esper said the headquarters of U.S. Africa Command, which
currently has about 2,000 personnel in Stuttgart, Germany, will also likely be
moved to Belgium, although a final location has yet to be determined. Wolters
said the plan calls for at least two Army battalions now stationed in Germany
to move to Italy. He did not give a date but said the first to move will be the
52nd Civil Engineering Battalion. The demands for deterrence in Europe require
speed of movement, which could better be handled by rotational forces coming
from the U.S., Wolters said, adding, "This realignment allows us to
favorably deter against Russia.
The Germany pullout has triggered
bipartisan criticism from Congress, with Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, calling it a
"gift" to Russian President Vladimir Putin. But Hyten said the plan
to rely more on rotational forces going to Europe from the U.S. will boost the
unpredictability of the overall deterrent. The plan will result in a better
alignment of NATO and EUCOM forces and "provide Gen. Wolters increased
ability to dynamically deploy his force," Hyten said. Hyten and Esper
sought to portray the pullout plan as part of a long-term review of the posture
of all the combatant commands, although Trump in announcing the withdrawal
directive last month said it was aimed at Germany's refusal to spend more on
national defense. Esper said that Trump's announcement had
"accelerated" Pentagon planning "to reduce our footprint in
Germany. We are still retaining a little more than 24,000 troops in Germany,
which is still a lot, and more than any other country in Europe." The
number of U.S. troops in Europe has "changed many times" over years,
Esper said, and "we're now at another one of those inflection points in
NATO's history." He added that Germany is one of the wealthiest countries
in Europe "and should pay more for its defense." Planning for
withdrawals from Germany began well before Trump gave the order in June, Esper
said. "We began this process actually several months ago when I gave EUCOM
direction to begin looking at ways to improve our force disposition in
NATO," he said. "I'm telling you that this is going to accomplish
what the president [ordered] with regard to getting us down to a lower number
in Europe, and it meets those other objectives I laid out with regard to the
strategic piece." At a June 24 White House meeting with Polish President
Andrzej Duda, Trump said that some of the U.S. troops withdrawn from Germany
would return to the U.S. and some would go to Poland. There was also
speculation at the time that some of the withdrawn troops would go to the
Indo-Pacific region as a counter to China. Esper said there is still a
possibility that some of the withdrawn troops will end up there. "They
could be, but right now there are no plans to do so," he said.
^ It seems this withdrawal is
going to happen sooner rather than later despite a worldwide pandemic and
travel restrictions. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.