From Military.com:
“US Halts
Plans to Move 12,000 Troops Out of Germany”
The U.S. is no
longer actively preparing to move nearly 12,000 troops out of Germany, putting
an initiative proposed by the Trump administration on ice while the Pentagon
reviews it, the top American general in Europe said Wednesday. The plan, which
called for relocating U.S. European Command from Stuttgart to Belgium,
returning the Vilseck, Germany-based 2nd Cavalry Regiment to the U.S. and a
host of other moves, would have been one of the largest repositioning of forces
in Europe in decades. "At this very moment, every single one of those
options, they are all on hold. They will all be reexamined from cradle to
grave," U.S. European Command's Gen. Tod Wolters told reporters. Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin has begun "a very thorough review" of the
proposed drawdown, which was announced in July by his predecessor, Mark Esper,
Wolters said. Then-president Donald Trump had ordered the Pentagon to come up
with a plan to reduce the U.S. military presence in Germany, saying that there
were too many American troops in the country, which he repeatedly said was not
investing enough in its own defense. At one point, Trump said Germany was
"delinquent" on its financial contributions to NATO. He also said the country was financially benefitting
from having U.S. forces in the country.
Around 34,000
troops are stationed in Germany, with many of them focused on missions in other
parts of Europe, such as enhancing security along NATO's eastern flank, or
extending the U.S. military's reach into the Middle East and Africa. When the
proposed drawdown was first announced, Esper and Wolters said taking troops out
of Germany and moving them elsewhere would enhance security on the Continent. But
critics of the plan, including a large, bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers,
questioned how reducing forces would enhance efforts to deter Russian
aggression on the Continent, a main focus of the U.S.-led NATO alliance since
the 2014 annexation of the Crimean Peninsula and the invasion of eastern
Ukraine. The possibility of withdrawing thousands of American troops shook the
many towns and cities in Germany that house them. Hans-Martin Schertl, the
mayor of Vilseck in Bavaria, called the proposed drawdown, which would have
pulled 4,500 troops out the town of just 6,400 residents, a "bitter
loss." Vilseck would need need state and federal government support to
survive, he said. Stuttgart Lord Mayor Fritz Kuhn in July called the proposed
troop cuts "punitive action against an ally" that "upended
decades of close cooperation" between Germany and the U.S. But, he said,
he was hopeful that the plan would be reversed and that the bases -- and U.S.
troops -- would stay put. Wolters did not say when Austin was expected to wrap
up his review. But when it is completed, he said, "we will go back to the
drawing board."
^ It’s
important to base the numbers of American Soldiers in any Military Base whether
it is in the US or around the world by how it will help keep America safe.
Hopefully, this review will decide that. America’s allies do need to
pick-up-the-pace and start doing a lot more to keep themselves and the rest of
the world safe. America should help, but not be the only solution. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2021/02/03/us-halts-plans-move-troops-out-germany.html
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