Trump's troop cut in Germany blindsided senior U.S. officials
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[June 09, 2020]
By Jonathan Landay, Andrea Shalal and Arshad Mohammed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump's decision to cut U.S. troop levels in Germany blindsided a number
of senior national security officials, according to five sources
familiar with the matter, and the Pentagon had yet to receive a formal
order to carry it out, Reuters has learned.
Trump decided to remove 9,500 troops from Germany, one of America's
strongest allies, reducing the number there to 25,000 from 34,500, a
senior U.S. official said on Friday.
That official said it was the result of months of work by the U.S.
military leadership and had nothing to do with tensions between Trump
and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who thwarted his plan to host an
in-person Group of Seven (G7) summit this month.
But other sources familiar with the matter said a number of U.S.
officials at the White House, State Department and Pentagon were
surprised by the decision and they offered explanations ranging from
Trump's pique over the G7 to the influence of Richard Grenell, the
former U.S. ambassador to Germany and a Trump loyalist.
Reuters could not determine if Grenell had played a direct role with
Trump in the decision-making. Grenell resigned his post on June 1,
according to a State Department spokeswoman.
The Defense and State Departments referred questions to the White House
National Security Council, which declined comment.
Asked for comment, Grenell said that "this is all gossip" and declined
to address specific questions about the decision and his role in it. The
reduction, he said, had been “in the works since last year.”
He underscored U.S. frustration over Germany’s failure to meet a NATO
target of defense spending of 2% of GDP. He noted that NATO Secretary
General Jens Stoltenberg named Germany as the only country that had not
submitted a credible plan for how to reach their commitment.
At an online event hosted by the Atlantic Council thinktank on Monday,
Stoltenberg declined to comment on what he termed “media leakages and
media speculation” when asked about U.S. plans to cut troop numbers in
Germany. He said NATO was “constantly consulting with the United States,
with other NATO allies on the military posture, presence in Europe.”
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a U.S. official told Reuters the
Pentagon had not received a formal order to cut troops and that the
decision caught some Defense Department officials off guard and
scrambling to figure out its meaning and impact on relations with
Germany.
Germany was not consulted before the decision was first reported by the
Wall Street Journal on Friday, two sources familiar with the matter
said.
German government officials said on Monday that Berlin had not received
confirmation of the U.S. move. But Peter Beyer, the German coordinator
for transatlantic ties, said it would "shake the pillars of the
transatlantic relationship."
The Trump administration pushed to reduce U.S. troops in Germany for
years and Grenell has criticized Berlin in public and private for
failing to meet the NATO target of spending 2% of GDP on defense, said a
source briefed on U.S.-German military relations.
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President Donald Trump speaks during a roundtable discussion with
law enforcement in the State Dining Room at the White House in
Washington, U.S., June 8, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
"In that sense, it wasn't a surprise, but there was no consultation
or coordination. And Trump administration officials had said they
did not expect a withdrawal of forces," the source added.
The decision - which has not been officially confirmed by the White
House - also surprised a number of senior national security
officials in the U.S. government.
Senior State Department, Pentagon and some national security council
officials were blindsided and "learned something was up when calls
started coming around and the WSJ article hit," said a third source
familiar with the matter.
'NOT PLAYING BALL'
A U.S. military drawdown from Germany could sharpen trans-Atlantic
tensions that Trump has fueled by questioning the value of NATO and
criticizing some alliance members' defense spending.
Security experts have called the withdrawal plan a "gift" to Russia
as it comes amid serious tensions between Washington and Moscow over
arms control, Moscow’s support for separatists in Ukraine, the U.S.
withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal and other issues.
But current and former officials noted the Trump administration had
at times announced steps - such as the total withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Syria in 2018 or an immediate $1 billion cut in U.S.
funding for Afghanistan in March - that did not come to pass.
A congressional aide familiar with the matter said he was told
Trump's decision was motivated, in part, by Merkel's reluctance to
attend the U.S. G7 summit because of the coronavirus pandemic.
"This was originally only done at very high levels and he (Grenell)
was involved. This was kept extremely close hold," said the
congressional aide on condition of anonymity, saying he was told the
decision was "sped up because he (Trump) was mad at Merkel for
cancelling his G7 party because of COVID."
U.S. Ambassador to Poland Georgette Mosbacher and Grenell publicly
warned in August that Trump could withdraw some troops from Germany
and suggested they could be relocated to Poland unless Merkel
responded to Trump's calls to increase defense spending.
"It would be the ultimate kind of slap to Germany if they were
rotated out of Germany and into Poland," said a former senior U.S.
official familiar with the matter, who requested anonymity in order
to speak freely. "From their (Grenell's and Mosbacher's) point of
view, the Germans were not playing ball and should be punished."
(Reporting by Jonathan Landay, Andrea Shalal, Arshad Mohammed;
Additional reporting by Idrees Ali and David Brunnstrom; Writing by
Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Mary Milliken and Peter Cooney)
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