Trump’s Troop Plan Stuns Germany and Rocks Postwar Order 

Angela Cullen and Arne Delfs 

 

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump’s directive to pull 9,500 troops from 
Germany hits home hard for friends of America like Edgar Knobloch, whose 
Bavarian town has been home to U.S. service members for seven decades.

Like Chancellor Angela Merkel, the mayor of Grafenwoehr was caught off guard. 
It’s the latest sign of the U.S.’s deterioration of ties with a loyal ally, one 
that not only hosts most of its troops in Europe but also has seen them fuel 
the local economy.

This medieval town, with a tiny population dwarfed by the size of the American 
military presence, shows just what a shadow the U.S. has cast over Europe after 
World War II and what its retreat symbolizes in the eyes of locals and 
international observers. Another troop cut would signal a further break with a 
legacy of two generations.

Located near the former East German border, Grafenwoehr is a place where 
overseas U.S. military infrastructure and community bonds survived the end of 
the Cold War. Locals celebrate Thanksgiving and enjoy spare ribs. Every year, 
they turn out by the thousands for the German-American Folk Festival to share 
beer, bratwurst and country music with the roughly 11,000 U.S. troops based at 
NATO’s biggest training area in Europe.

 

“They’re completely integrated here,” Knobloch, 55, said in an interview. 
“Restaurants are bilingual. There are mixed marriages, mixed families. You 
often hear from the older members of the community: ‘The Americans liberated 
us.’”

There hasn’t been much nostalgia between Trump and Merkel, who have clashed 
repeatedly over trade and Germany’s slow timetable for meeting the North 
Atlantic Treaty Organization’s defense spending target. Last month, Merkel 
snubbed Trump on his plan to hold an in-person Group of Seven summit  
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-05-30/merkel-citing-global-virus-may-skip-trump-s-rescheduled-g-7>
 in June which he’d like Russian President Vladimir Putin  
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-06-01/trump-explained-his-g-7-plan-to-putin-kremlin-says>
 to attend.

 

U.S.-German relations have become “complicated,” German foreign minister Heiko 
Maas said, in the first comment by a government official about the planned 
troop withdrawal. As of Sunday, the government still hadn’t received any 
official communication from the U.S. “Should there be a partial withdrawal of 
U.S. troops, we will take note of it,” Maas told the tabloid Bild am Sonntag.

While Trump has taken aim at Germany’s economic might, Merkel — the 
longest-serving G-7 leader after 15 years in power — has stared him down across 
a broad front, from defending the rules-based global economy to policy disputes 
such as defense spending. A physicist by training, Merkel also contrasted with 
Trump in her science-based approach to reopening Germany from its coronavirus 
lockdown.

 

Lawmakers and government officials in Berlin criticized Trump’s troop decision, 
which would cut U.S. forces in Germany by slightly more than a quarter, as a 
snub.

“These plans demonstrate once again that the Trump administration neglects a 
central element of leadership: the involvement of alliance partners in the 
decision-making process,” Johann Wadephul, deputy head of Merkel’s 
parliamentary caucus, said in an emailed statement.

 
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-30/the-moment-merkel-realized-trump-changes-everything-for-germany>
 Read more: The Moment Merkel Realized Trump Changes Everything for Germany

Trump’s decision and the way it was communicated hint at how much Germany’s 
relations have cooled with a U.S. president who has publicly questioned NATO’s 
value.

Green party lawmaker Tobias Lindner evoked Trump’s appearances at NATO summits, 
where has he berated U.S. allies to step up defense spending and called Germany 
“a captive to Russia” for refusing to halt the Nord Stream 2 gas  
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-12-18/u-s-concedes-defeat-on-nord-stream-2-pipeline-officials-say>
 pipeline project.

“Somebody who acts in this way can’t show up in Brussels with the attitude of 
reminding alliance partners of their duties,” Lindner said.

Even so, a U.S. troop reduction may make military sense, since Germany nowadays 
serves mostly as a hub for U.S. operations in other parts of the world such as 
the Middle East and North, said a German government official who asked not to 
be named because the decision hasn’t been publicly announced. Other key U.S. 
installations in Germany include Ramstein Air Base and the Landstuhl Regional 
Medical Center hospital.

 

During the heyday of post-World War II relations, U.S. troops were welcomed in 
West Germany as liberators from the Nazis and a bulwark against a Soviet 
invasion. Older Germans remember when Elvis Presley was stationed as a G.I. in 
1958-60 at Friedberg, north of Frankfurt. To the delight of young German women, 
he even recorded a song in broken German about his time there. The Army closed 
the post in 2007.

Important Partner

Attitudes shifted in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when NATO’s decision to 
base U.S. Pershing II’s in Germany to counter Soviet ballistic missiles 
triggered mass protests in West Germany. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 
1989, some German politicians have called for the removal of U.S. nuclear 
weapons from German soil.

Ties forged over decades by American service members who rotated through 
Germany have left their mark in the U.S., too. While 85% of Americans view U.S. 
military bases in Germany as important for U.S. national security, only 52% of 
Germans say the bases are important for their own national security, according 
to a poll by Pew Research and the Koerber Foundation published in November.

 

Yet Germans are more likely to view the U.S. as an  
<https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/11/25/americans-and-germans-remain-far-apart-in-views-of-bilateral-relations-2/>
 important partner than Americans are likely to view Germany as one, according 
to the poll.

Reports that Trump is considering further cuts and a possible troop shift to 
Poland have surfaced for at least two years. Meanwhile, U.S. troop strength in 
Germany has dwindled to about 34,500 from a peak of 274,000 during the 1960s.

“Such a pullout would be regrettable in every way,” Norbert Roettgen, a Merkel 
ally who heads the German parliament’s foreign affairs committee, said in an 
interview with Funke Media Group. “I can’t see any rational reason for the 
withdrawal.”

‘Great Pity’

 

As in previous rounds of cuts, German regions where troops are stationed would 
take an economic hit. About half of U.S. troops are stationed in the state of 
Rhineland-Palatinate, which borders France, Belgium and Luxembourg.

“This affects not only 9,500 troops, but also their families, which means about 
20,000 Americans in total,” Peter Beyer, the government’s coordinator for 
trans-Atlantic relations, told the DPA newswire. He said he fears lasting 
damage to U.S.-German ties.

At Grafenwoehr, Mayor Knobloch says American service members are so much a part 
of local society that they immediately abided by Bavaria’s measures against the 
coronavirus pandemic. He’s betting the U.S. won’t ditch Grafenwoehr, in part 
because the Army has invested in the facility in recent years.

“It would be a great pity if it came to that,” the mayor said. “In Grafenwoehr, 
you can really see how understanding among nations functions in daily life.”

EM         -> { Trump for 2020 }

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika 
machafuko" 

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