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White House has no plans to pull US troops out of Germany

The White House reaffirmed on July 6th that there are no plans to withdraw or transfer US troops stationed in Germany – and that the issue would not be on the agenda of next week's NATO summit.

White House has no plans to pull US troops out of Germany
Ben Hodges, who commanded U.S. troops in Europe, at the Dresden Military History Museum in 2016. Photo: DPA

“There is nothing being said at all about the troop alignment in Germany or anything that would change the 32,000 troop force that we have in Germany,” said a senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

US troops have been stationed in Germany since World War II, and the country serves as a rear base for US operations in Africa and the Middle East. The Washington Post recently reported that the Pentagon was evaluating the cost of transferring or withdrawing the troops — the biggest contingent outside the United States.

READ ALSO: US weighs withdrawing troops from Germany: report

The Pentagon had denied any suggestion of a pullout, saying the department regularly reviews its troop positioning and performs cost-benefit analyses — and that “this is nothing new.”

President Donald Trump – who is heading to Brussels for the July 11th-12th NATO summit – has written to a number of America's partners in the transatlantic alliance, including Germany, to remind them of their commitment to raise defense spending to at least two percent of GDP by 2024.

Following the summit, Trump will head to Britain, and on to Helsinki for a closely-watched face-to-face with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin.

 

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