Roots and ruptures: Trump withdraws troops from his ancestral lands after conflict with Merz
TOI correspondent from Washington: In a move fraught with geopolitical tension and personal irony, US President donald trumpwhose grandfather came from Germany, giving him one of the closest generational ties to the country of any modern American leader, has ordered the withdrawal of about 5,000 US troops from Germany after Washington clashed publicly with Chancellor Friedrich Merz over the conduct of the war in Iran.The Pentagon said the withdrawal would be completed in six to twelve months after a “thorough review” of the US military situation in Europe. But officials on both sides of the Atlantic acknowledge that times are anything but normal. It follows Meraz’s unusually sharp criticism of the US campaign, in which he said Washington had entered the conflict “without any strategy” and suggested Iran was diplomatically outmaneuvering and outmaneuvering the US.US officials called the comments “inappropriate and unhelpful”, suggesting that the withdrawal was a punitive measure to send a message to NATO partners that are not living up to Trump’s expectations. Trump himself attacked Merz, saying in a social media post, “The Chancellor of Germany should spend more time on ending the war with Russia/Ukraine (where he has been completely ineffective!) and fixing his broken country, especially immigration and energy, and less time on meddling with those who are trying to get rid of the Iran nuclear threat, making the world, including Germany, a safer place!” German officials, for their part, indicated that the decision was not entirely surprising given the growing rift in the trans-Atlantic alliance, as Spain, France, Italy and Britain are increasingly being hit by Trump’s storm. The move will affect Army brigade combat teams and other units that will be part of a surge of U.S. forces in Europe after 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But it also impacts the US commitment to NATO, an alliance Trump has repeatedly criticized as unbalanced and overly dependent on US power.Germany is not just another host country. With approximately 35,000 US troops and 20 to 40 military installations, it is the central hub of US military operations in Europe, and hosts the largest concentration of US troops overseas after Japan (50,000). Facilities such as Ramstein Air Base and the headquarters of U.S. European Command and U.S. Africa Command underpin operations extending beyond the continent, including missions in the Middle East and Africa. Across Europe, the US maintains about 65,000 to 70,000 troops, meaning Germany alone hosts more than half the US military footprint on the continent.There is an obvious irony in Trump’s latest confrontation with Berlin. Of all modern American presidents, he has the closest generational ties to Germany. His grandfather, Frederick Trump, came from the German village of Kallstedt in the late 19th century, making Trump, whose original family name is Drumpf, a relatively recent descendant compared to predecessors such as Eisenhower and Nixon, whose German ancestry is more distant.The decision also reflects broader questions about the scale and cost of America’s global military posture. The US maintains more than 700 bases in more than 80 countries, with 170,000 to 220,000 personnel deployed overseas – an expeditionary network unmatched in modern history, the results of which have been captured in films such as Buffalo Soldiers and Sayonara. Maintaining that system costs an estimated $50 billion to $70 billion annually, covering operations, infrastructure, logistics, and personnel. Within Trump’s MAGA coalition, the withdrawal aligns with a growing sense that the US should reduce its foreign commitments and focus resources closer to home or on more pressing theaters such as the Indo-Pacific. That approach has long shaped Trump’s approach toward Europe, where he has accused allies of failing to meet defense spending commitments and being overly reliant on American security. The decision has already been criticized by US lawmakers concerned about its strategic signals. But for all its immediate political aspects, the withdrawal reflects a deeper shift in transatlantic relations. Since World War II, American forces in Germany have been a symbol not only of military power but also of the strategic and cultural bond between America and Europe. This makes the present moment all the more impressive: A president with direct family roots in Germany is presiding over a partial unraveling of the security architecture that emerged from that shared history.
