Republicans Slam Trump’s Germany Troop Cuts as a Gift to Putin
President Donald Trump is facing an unusual challenge, not from Democrats, not from European allies, but from senior members of his own Republican Party. After the Pentagon announced plans to pull thousands of American troops out of Germany, two of the most powerful Republicans in Congress stepped forward to say the move was a mistake that could hand a dangerous advantage to Russia.
Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi and Representative Mike Rogers of Alabama, who chair the Senate and House Armed Services Committees respectively, released a joint statement expressing deep concern over the decision.
Their message was direct: reducing America’s military presence in Europe at this moment sends exactly the wrong message to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Rather than bringing those troops home, they argued, the smarter move would be to shift them further east, closer to the front lines of the ongoing Russian threat , where they would do more to strengthen rather than weaken the alliance.
The Pentagon announced on Friday that roughly 5,000 troops would be withdrawn from bases in Germany. The official explanation pointed to a review of military needs across the region and what the Department of Defense described as conditions on the ground. But few observers took that explanation at face value.
The decision came in the direct aftermath of a public clash between Trump and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who had made unusually frank remarks suggesting the United States was being humiliated by Iranian negotiators in the ongoing war. Washington’s response was swift and punishing — troops out.
Trump made clear on Saturday that this was only the beginning. Speaking to reporters in Florida, he said the United States was going to cut its presence in Germany far beyond the initial 5,000 figure. He offered no further detail, but the implication was unmistakable: the withdrawal is tied to his frustration with European allies who have refused to support his campaign against Iran, rather than any strategic military planning.
That framing is precisely what has alarmed Wicker and Rogers. In their statement, the two lawmakers warned that pulling back American forces before European allies have fully built up their own capabilities risks hollowing out the very deterrence that has kept Russia from moving further west.
They also raised another concern: the Pentagon had quietly cancelled the planned deployment of the Army’s Long-Range Fires Battalion alongside the troop withdrawal, a decision that received far less attention but carries serious implications for European defence. The two Republicans called on the Pentagon to engage with congressional oversight committees before making any further changes of this scale.
Not everyone in the party agreed. Republican Congressman Clay Higgins took a sharply different view, backing the administration’s move and dismissing concerns about Germany with pointed sarcasm, suggesting the Senate would be a better fit for European security than actual soldiers.
Democrats were no less critical, though less surprised. The senior Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee called the withdrawal completely disconnected from any real national security logic, arguing it was driven by the president’s personal anger rather than military judgment.
Germany’s own Defence Minister Boris Pistorius acknowledged that the departure of American troops had been expected for some time and said European nations needed to take greater ownership of their own security. He was careful to add, however, that an American military presence in Europe remained firmly in the interest of both sides.
NATO responded cautiously. The alliance’s spokesperson said it was working to understand the full details of the American decision, while noting that the move underscored the need for European members to invest more heavily in their own defence capabilities.
The broader context makes the timing especially sensitive. Around 80,000 to 100,000 American military personnel are currently stationed across Europe, a number that grew significantly after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Germany hosts the largest single contingent of that presence, with more than 36,000 active duty troops on its soil. Any significant reduction in that footprint, critics argue, does not go unnoticed in Moscow.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk added perhaps the starkest warning of all, suggesting that the greater threat to European security may not be any single country, but the gradual disintegration of the NATO alliance itself.
Trump, for his part, showed no sign of slowing down. He also suggested that American troop levels in Spain and Italy could face similar reductions, raising the prospect of a wider pullback from the continent he has long accused of taking American protection for granted. #Republicans Slam Trump’s Germany Troop Cuts as a Gift to Putin#
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