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US withdrawing 5,000 troops from Germany, US officials say

By Thomson Reuters May 1, 2026 | 4:33 PM

By Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali

WASHINGTON, May 1 (Reuters) – The United States is withdrawing 5,000 troops from NATO ally Germany, the Pentagon announced on Friday, as a rift over the ​Iran war widens between President Donald Trump and Europe.

Trump ‌had threatened a drawdown in forces earlier this week after sparring with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who said on Monday the Iranians were humiliating the U.S. in talks to end the two-month-old war.

A senior Pentagon official, speaking on condition of ‌anonymity, ​said recent German rhetoric had been “inappropriate and ⁠unhelpful.”

“The president is rightly reacting ⁠to these counterproductive remarks,” the official said.

The Pentagon said the withdrawal was expected to be completed over the next six to twelve months.

The official said the drawdown would bring U.S. troop levels ​in Europe back to roughly pre-2022 levels, before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered a buildup by then President Joe Biden.

A brigade combat ⁠team now in Germany will be ⁠pulled out of the country and a long-range fires ​battalion that the Biden administration had planned to begin deploying to Germany ​later this year will no longer deploy, the official said.

Germany ‌is the U.S. military’s biggest basing location in Europe, with some 35,000 active-duty military personnel, and serves as a key training hub.

Trump has singled out Germany even as he has harshly criticized other NATO ⁠allies for not sending their navies to help open the Strait of Hormuz during the conflict.

The waterway, a chokepoint for global oil shipments, has remained ⁠virtually shut, causing ‌market turmoil and unprecedented disruption in energy supplies.

Merz ⁠has said Germans and Europeans were not consulted before ​the ‌U.S. and Israel started attacking Iran on February ​28, and that ⁠he had conveyed his scepticism about the conflict directly to Trump afterwards.

“The president has been very clear about his frustrations about our allies’ rhetoric and failure to provide support for U.S. operations that benefit them,” the senior Pentagon official said.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali, Editing ​by Rosalba O’Brien)