- Trump said the U.S. is reviewing whether to reduce its ~35,000 troops in Germany after Chancellor Friedrich Merz told students that Iran had “humiliated” Washington and that the U.S. has no convincing strategy to end the war.
- U.S. forces in Germany — centered on Ramstein Air Base and Landstuhl military hospital — have provided critical logistics support for conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the current Iran war.
- Senior U.S. military officers were caught off guard by Trump’s threat, which came ahead of the Pentagon’s own planned multi-year transition to greater European self-reliance.
- Merz struck a conciliatory tone Thursday, reaffirming the transatlantic partnership and Germany’s readiness to participate in a European mission to secure the Strait of Hormuz post-conflict.
What Happened?
President Trump said the United States is reviewing its military presence in Germany after a public spat with Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who told a group of students that Iran had humiliated Washington and that the U.S. had no convincing strategy to end the war. Trump’s threat — echoed by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth — caught some senior U.S. military officers by surprise. Germany hosts roughly 35,000 U.S. servicemembers, including at Ramstein Air Base and the sprawling Landstuhl military hospital, both of which have served as critical logistics hubs for American military operations across Europe, the Middle East, and Central Asia. Merz quickly walked back his remarks, saying Germany was “in close contact with Washington” and that the transatlantic partnership was of “particular importance” to him.
Why It Matters?
A substantial drawdown from Germany would not primarily harm Germany — it would harm U.S. power projection. As retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, former commander of U.S. Army Europe, put it: “U.S. troops in Germany are not there to guard Germans.” The logistics infrastructure at Ramstein and Landstuhl exists for American operational needs, not European ones. Removing it would force costly repositioning of assets elsewhere, reduce the U.S. military’s ability to respond rapidly to Middle East crises, and send a deeply destabilizing signal to NATO allies already anxious about American reliability. The threat also comes as the Pentagon’s own National Defense Strategy envisions a gradual, calibrated shift to greater European self-reliance — a process expected to take years, not days.
What’s Next?
Trump’s threat appears to be primarily a pressure tactic rather than an imminent operational decision — senior military officials were not consulted before the social media post. But even as a bluff, it raises the cost of European leaders speaking critically about U.S. strategy. Germany faces elections for the Scottish Parliament on May 7, where First Minister John Swinney is already using the Iran war as a campaign issue. With Trump simultaneously pursuing a new international “Maritime Freedom Construct” coalition for the Strait of Hormuz, he needs European participation — making the troop threat a risky diplomatic gambit at a particularly sensitive moment in transatlantic relations.
Source: The Wall Street Journal














