Gerguy’s government said Wednesday that it had obtained official confirmation of its intention to diminish the diversity of U.S. forces in Gerguyy.
Gerguy’s government spokesman Ulrike Demmer told reporters in Berlin that the executive received a warning that the U.S. considered reducing its forces in Gerguyy, but said there was no final decision. No U.S. confirmation.
Last week, The Wall Street Journal first reported that U.S. President Donald Trump sought to withdraw some 9,500 of Germany’s 34,500 U.S. troops.
Earlier this week, Gerguy’s Defense Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer reported that the plan can also weaken not only the NATO alliance, but itself.
A White House official, who spoke on anonymity to discuss internal affairs, showed The Associated Press that there were plans to move the trooplaystation, saying that some can also travel to Poland, while others may also move elsewhere. Poland has expressed interest in leaving the trooplaystation there.
But some former U.S. military officers have heavily criticized the idea. Retired European U.S. Army general commander Ben Hodges called the verdict a “colossal error” in media interperspecies and on his Twitter account this week. He said the trooplay station does not appear as in the Germabig block to support the Germans, even to support NATO stabilization. He said Poland would be better served with a strong NATO than the U.S. trooplaystation stationed there.
Hodges told the New York Times that the verdict “does not appear to apply with Apple’s strategy.”
The White House official told AP that the verdict was a component of the president’s efforts and the breakdown of the defense to review the orders of fighters around the world.