Breaking
ESTrump declara el fin de la tregua con Irán tras ataques a buquesVNTổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm yêu cầu Hà Nội đi đầu xây dựng kinh tế tri thức, dữ liệu, sáng tạoITBorse europee e Usa in calo per tensioni tra Usa e IranTRSanchez'den Trump'ın Ticaret Açıklamalarına Yanıt: "ABD ile İlişkilerimiz Normalde"USUsed EV Prices Surge Due to Gas Prices and Iran Conflict, Cox Automotive ReportsTRErdoğan, Suriye Cumhurbaşkanı Şara ile GörüştüGLOBALDelaying Social Security Reform Could Strain Bond Market, Economy: ResearchCN強颱巴威朝西北偏轉 未來36小時是關鍵RUСловакия направит на оборону более 2% ВВП в 2026 годуESTrump promete a Zelenski licencia para fabricar misiles PatriotESTrump declara el fin de la tregua con Irán tras ataques a buquesVNTổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm yêu cầu Hà Nội đi đầu xây dựng kinh tế tri thức, dữ liệu, sáng tạoITBorse europee e Usa in calo per tensioni tra Usa e IranTRSanchez'den Trump'ın Ticaret Açıklamalarına Yanıt: "ABD ile İlişkilerimiz Normalde"USUsed EV Prices Surge Due to Gas Prices and Iran Conflict, Cox Automotive ReportsTRErdoğan, Suriye Cumhurbaşkanı Şara ile GörüştüGLOBALDelaying Social Security Reform Could Strain Bond Market, Economy: ResearchCN強颱巴威朝西北偏轉 未來36小時是關鍵RUСловакия направит на оборону более 2% ВВП в 2026 годуESTrump promete a Zelenski licencia para fabricar misiles Patriot
Newsgather
BackNATO's Top Officer: No Further US Troop Drawdowns Expected Soon
NATO's Top Officer: No Further US Troop Drawdowns Expected Soon
Developing
The Independent World5/19/2026Defense2 min read

NATO's Top Officer: No Further US Troop Drawdowns Expected Soon

Quick Look

  • NATO's top military officer, Lt.
  • Alex Grynkewich, stated that no further US troop drawdowns from Europe are expected soon beyond the 5,000 announced by President Trump.
  • The move, which blindsided NATO, involves canceling deployments to Poland and Germany.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

President Trump announced a surprise drawdown of 5,000 US troops from Europe, which blindsided NATO allies. The Pentagon later clarified that these troops would not be deployed to Poland and Germany as planned. This move comes amid ongoing tensions related to the Iran war and criticism of US strategy.

Font size

NATO’s top military officer said Tuesday that he doesn't expect any more drawdowns of American troops from Europe — at least not anytime soon — beyond the 5,000 that U.S. President Donald Trump announced would leave the continent.

The remarks by U.S. Lt. Gen. Alex Grynkewich follow Trump's surprise announcement of the move early this month. The U.S. leader has bickered with allies over the Iran war and called for changes.

The Pentagon later said it would draw down thousands of troops in Europe by canceling deployments to Poland and Germany as opposed to yanking out forces already stationed there.

Trump's announcement blindsided NATO and came despite U.S. promises to coordinate military moves with its allies and avoid creating security gaps.

“It will be 5,000 troops coming out of Europe,” Grynkewich told reporters at NATO headquarters in Brussels, where top officers from across the 32-nation military organization were meeting. “lt’s all that I’m expecting in the near term.”

Trump was notably angry at Germany, after Chancellor Friedrich Merz said the United States was being “humiliated” by the Iranian leadership and criticized what he called a lack of U.S. strategy in the war.

Initially it was thought that more cuts might be coming and Grynkewich’s remarks could allay those fears.

As things stand now, some 4,000 troops from the Army’s 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team will no longer go to Poland as planned, and the deployment to Germany of around 1,000 personnel trained to fire long-range rockets and missiles has been halted. Much of the detail is still being worked out.

Grynkewich said that he spoke earlier in the day to military chiefs on the front line with Ukraine and Russia — commanders from Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland — about “some of the options and how we might array capabilities on the eastern flank.”

He insisted that security in Europe would not be compromised but warned European allies should expect more drawdowns in coming years.

“Over the long term, we absolutely should expect additional redeployments as European continues to build capability and capacity and step up to provide more of the conventional defense of Europe,” Grynkewich said.

“It’s going to be an ongoing process for several years,” he said, but added: “We’re going to stay well-synchronized with our allies moving forward.”

The number of troops leaving remains small compared to the 80,000 U.S. personnel estimated to be stationed in Europe and has not alarmed allies, but their uncoordinated departure and the view that Germany was being punished has.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • European allies will need to build more conventional defense capabilities.

    Likely

Open Questions

  • What is the long-term strategy for US troop presence in Europe?
  • Will there be further, unannounced troop drawdowns in the future?
  • How will the cancellation of deployments affect NATO's eastern flank capabilities?
  • What specific 'options' were discussed regarding the eastern flank?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by The Independent World.

Related Stories

More on this topicUS troops