German town ponders life without U.S. troops
VILSECK, Germany — There is a bar called “Cheers,” and there are Halloween parties, decorated houses and trick-ortreating in October and turkeys at Thanksgiving. The mayor’s childhood memories include Hershey’s bars, jars of peanut butter and Wrigley’s gum.
For seven decades, the rituals and rhythms of American life have interwoven with the local traditions of Vilseck, a small Bavarian town near the Czech border that is home to the Rose Barracks U.S. military base. Here, the German-American Volksfest is the biggest fair of the year, and the long-standing ties between Germany and the United States are defined not as “the trans-atlantic relationship,” but as simply, “friendship.”
Mayor Hans-mart Schertl said, “When I have a problem, I just pick up the phone and call the commander,” Col. Joseph Ewers, who leads the U.S. Army Second Cavalry Regiment and oversees the several thousand U.S. service members stationed at Rose Barracks with their families. “I wish the leaders in Berlin and Washington had ties as good as ours, it makes it easier to solve problems.”
That warmth has endured the minor culture clashes that Schertl has navigated as mayor, such as smoothing things over between irate German landlords and their American tenants who cut pet doors into human doors, or having to call in the Army’s military police to wrangle soldiers who get carried away on German beer.
Schertl has seen repeated changes of command on the base, and watched countless service members and their families rotate in as wide-eyed strangers and back out as friends. But he never thought he would face the prospect that a large part of his town’s population, the “American fellow citizens,” could be pulled out overnight.
No guarantees
In July, the Pentagon ordered the withdrawal of 12,000 of about 36,000 troops in Germany, which President Donald Trump attributed to Germany being “delinquent” on military spending, and he has since hinted at further drawdowns.
The move sent a sense of panic through places such as Vilseck, where the U.S. military presence is a pillar of the local economy.
This month, Congress approved a $741.5 billion defense-spending bill that would prohibit the Defense Department from stationing fewer than 34,500 service members in Germany, without first submitting a detailed report on the matter and then waiting 120 days. Trump vetoed the bill on Dec. 23, but the House voted Monday to override his veto, and the Senate is expected to vote soon on overriding.
“It is the biggest Christmas present possible for Vilseck,” Schertl said.
But even if that gift materializes, Trump’s drawdo wnis a reminder that the U.S. presence does not come with a guarantee.
For many German families, ties to the Americans go back to the post-world War II years when Bavaria was part of the U.s.-administered zone of Germany, and the soldiers stationed there brought not only candy, music and a touch of worldliness, but reliable jobs.
When Wolfgang Dagner graduated from high school in 1983, he needed to make some money before starting college. Following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, he took a job working for the Army in Grafenwöhr, a town adjacent to Vilseck that is home to a large military training area.
“I wanted to take a year off before going to study, but I enjoyed the work so much that I stayed,” said Dagner, now 56.
Local employees
Before 1990, U.S. bases in Germany employed some 120,000 locals, but several bases closed as the Cold War ended. Today about 12,000 people in Germany work on installations for the Americans.
Dagner now works on a council representing more than 400 support and logistics workers employed at the bases, whose official roles include helping keep troops fed, repairing their offices, homes and equipment, organizing their moves and supplying them with gear when they arrive.
Unofficially, they serve as cultural translators, offering guidance on when and where it is appropriate to wear traditional Bavarian attire, tips on where to find Oktoberfest celebrations and warnings about the strength of a “mass,” or slightly less than a quart, of beer.
“We have to tell them that Bavarians don’t always wear a dirndl and lederhosen,” said Andrea Orr, who works at the military exchange store in Grafenwöhr. “And that Oktoberfest is not only in Munich, but takes place in many smaller towns and villages.”
Dagner said he worries about the growing number of attractive base jobs that are not filled by locals when someone retires, or that require a security clearance that only a U.S. citizen can acquire. Yet at the same time, the Americans are desperately seeking highly skilled workers, including engineers, mechanics and information technology specialists.
“It is not possible to offer the levels of pay increases and career development that can be achieved at a company like Siemens,” Dagner said, referring to the German engineering giant. “They can offer a whole other level of possibilities than we can.”
Even if the Second Cavalry were to remain in town, Schertl said that after the upheaval of the past year, his focus in the coming years would be on diversifying Vilseck’s economy to ensure job security in the long run, no matter who is in the White House.
Like many Germans in the area, he says the worstcase scenario would be for Americans to switch from housing one unit at Rose Barracks for many years, to rotating units through for short periods. In that case, the troops and their families would not be around long enough to require local goods and services — but long enough to hold earsplitting live-fire exercises.
“The agreement has always been in exchange for that, we have good solid jobs and cross-cultural exchange,” Schertl said. “If those were to go and just the noise and filth remain, it will be harder to maintain the levels of support that we have now.”