Malta Independent

Pentagon chief on inaugural tour of Europe to shore up ties

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Nearly a year after President Donald Trump ordered thousands of troops to leave Germany, capping a series of setbacks for U.S. relations with major allies, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin began an inaugural tour of Europe to shore up partnershi­ps that are a cornerston­e of the post-World War II order.

Austin arrived in Berlin on Monday against the backdrop of a newly emerging crisis with Iran, which on Monday blamed Israel for a recent attack on its undergroun­d Natanz nuclear facility. Israel has not confirmed or denied involvemen­t, but the attack nonetheles­s imperils ongoing talks in Europe over Tehran’s tattered nuclear deal.

Also at stake in Austin’s visit is the future direction of U.S. defense commitment­s in Europe at a time of growing concern about Russian military interventi­on on NATO’s periphery, including a buildup of Russian forces near Ukraine’s border. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken was headed to Europe to discuss with U.S. allies the Ukraine situation as well as the administra­tion’s thinking on further withdrawal­s of troops from Afghanista­n.

The United States also seeks European support for its approach to countering China around the world and for efforts to restore an internatio­nal agreement with limits on Iran’s nuclear program.

Austin arrived in the German capital on Monday night and will hold talks Tuesday with senior government officials. He will also visit NATO headquarte­rs later this week in Belgium and meet with British defense officials in London. He began his trip Sunday in Israel, where he underscore­d U.S. defense support in meetings with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Benny Gantz.

Austin, a former four-star Army general whose overseas military experience was primarily in Iraq, is likely to assure German officials of intentions by the Biden administra­tion to keep troops in Germany, though the number is subject to discussion as part of a monthslong global review of the basing of U.S. troops. Last year, Trump ordered the number in Germany reduced by about 12,000, to about 24,000.

In his first visit to NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels since taking office, Austin will meet with Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g, who declared on President Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on day that the arrival of a new administra­tion marked “the start of a new chapter for the trans-Atlantic alliance.”

Trump’s departure from the world stage gave the Biden administra­tion an opening to restore a more supportive U.S. approach to Europe and the NATO alliance, but complicati­ons will persist. For example, the NATO allies are anxious for Biden to decide whether to pull out of Afghanista­n. NATO has more troops there than does the United States, and Biden’s indecision troubles them, not least because they count on U.S. military support for removing troops and equipment.

The attack on Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility further complicate­s U.S. efforts to draw Iran back into a nuclear deal. Austin was asked about this earlier Monday while in Israel, and he said only that he expects the administra­tion’s diplomatic efforts with Iran will continue.

On the broader horizon, the European allies remain uncertain how their defense and security relationsh­ip with the United States will be affected by Biden’s push to focus more on China as the chief threat to U.S. security. That shift in U.S. thinking began during the Obama administra­tion, which announced a “pivot” to Asia that left Europeans thinking their U.S. ally was turning its back. Washington adjusted diplomatic­ally and rhetorical­ly, assuring the Europeans that it was just a “rebalancin­g.”

Then came Trump. His administra­tion further emphasized China as the prime security threat, but of greater concern to the Europeans was his frequent, sometimes shocking, denigratio­n of the trans-Atlantic partnershi­p that had been the foundation of U.S. security policy for decades. He dismissed the NATO allies as freeloader­s, and last summer he ordered the removal of about one-third of the U.S. force in Germany, as well as the move of U.S. European Command headquarte­rs from Germany to Belgium.

“We don’t want to be the suckers anymore,” Trump told reporters last July, calling the Germans ingrates who don’t spend enough on defense but expect the United States to protect them from Russia.

Germany has been an anchor for the U.S. military presence in Europe since the early post-World War II years. In addition to hosting the headquarte­rs for U.S. European and U.S. Africa commands, Germany’s Ramstein Air Base is headquarte­rs for NATO air and missile defenses. The U.S. Army’s largest overseas hospital, the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, is a few miles from Ramstein Air Base. The U.S. Air Force also has a substantia­l presence in Germany, including the 52nd Fighter Wing at Spangdahle­m.

In his first speech to an internatio­nal audience, Biden in February declared to the Munich Security Conference: “America is back, the trans-Atlantic alliance is back, and we are not looking backward. We are looking forward together.”

Biden suspended the Trump decision on a partial withdrawal of troops from Germany, which had not yet been implemente­d. It seems likely the administra­tion will decide not to carry out the Trump order.

Jim Townsend, who served throughout the Obama administra­tion as the Pentagon’s lead policy official on Europe and NATO, said in an interview that he sees lasting value in Austin’s touring of European capitals early in his tenure.

“It’s a better way to repair the torn fabric of that trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip,” Townsend said.

Even if the Europeans can put the Trump-era tensions behind them, they will still have questions about the Biden emphasis on China, which is not a frontburne­r issue for the Europeans. They largely view NATO as a bulwark against Russia, particular­ly since Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and its interventi­on in eastern Ukraine, which is not a NATO member but aspires to join.

 ??  ?? U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, left, presents Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz, right, with a framed copy of a formerly Top Secret memo regarding U.S. considerat­ion of granting official recognitio­n of the state of Israel shortly after its creation in 1948, at Nevatim Israeli Air Force Base, yesterday in Israel. The inset photo on right shows President Truman and Secretary of State George Marshall. Photo: AP
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, left, presents Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz, right, with a framed copy of a formerly Top Secret memo regarding U.S. considerat­ion of granting official recognitio­n of the state of Israel shortly after its creation in 1948, at Nevatim Israeli Air Force Base, yesterday in Israel. The inset photo on right shows President Truman and Secretary of State George Marshall. Photo: AP
 ??  ?? U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin
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