Trump hasn’t told Germany that he’s pulling out troops

Bloomberg

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government said it’s received no official word from Washington on plans to withdraw US troops from Germany, the latest sign of deteriorating relations between the two countries.
“As of this hour, there is no official confirmation by the appropriate authorities in the United States whether these plans will really be carried out or not,” Defense Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said during a press conference in Berlin on Monday, days after the news was reported by numerous media outlets. “We’re only aware of the information that is in the press.”
Merkel’s chief spokesman, Steffen Seibert, earlier had a similar response when asked at a regular news conference.
President Donald Trump’s directive to pull 9,500 troops from Germany caught authorities off guard and underscored just how much relations between Washington and Berlin have cooled.
“The fact is that the presence of US soldiers in Germany serves the overall security of NATO, so American security
as well,” Kramp-Karrenbauer said. “That’s the basis of our
cooperation.”
Merkel and Trump have sparred repeatedly over issues from international trade to defense strategy.
The two have also taken divergent paths to combating the coronavirus. Last month,
she snubbed the US president’s plan to hold an in-person Group of Seven summit in
June.
“The president is punishing Merkel not only for rejecting his invite to a G-7 that is clearly a political stunt here in
occupied Washington but for other perceived slights,” Jim Townsend, a former Pentagon official for European and NATO policy, wrote on Twitter. “It’s so transparent. Allies wonder if they’re next.”
While Trump has long insisted that Germany must step up defense spending, Merkel has stood her ground on a broad range of issues, insisting on a multilateral, rules-based approach to global economic affairs and backing a pipeline that is to carry Russian gas to Germany despite US opposition.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg vowed to push for more political unity in the transatlantic alliance and said the coronavirus pandemic is magnifying a range of threats to the security of the alliance. He cited Russian military muscle-flexing, state-sponsored disinformation and China’s geopolitical rise.
“Military strength is only part of the answer — we also need to use NATO more politically,” Stoltenberg told an online event on Monday.

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