International04 May 2026

German chancellor downplays row with Trump

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he must accept that ‌President Donald Trump does not share his opinions in order to work with the United States within NATO, but stressed there was no link between their rift and a planned troop drawdown.

Merz ​dismissed suggestions that his criticism of U.S. war planning in Iran had ​sparked Washington's Friday announcement that the U.S. would reduce its military presence in ⁠Germany, its largest European base, by 5,000 soldiers, and repeated his commitment to ​the transatlantic alliance.

Merz had questioned whether Trump had an exit plan for the Middle ​East and said the U.S. was being "embarrassed" in talks with Iran. Trump later called Merz an "ineffectual" leader.

"I have to accept that the American president has a different view on these issues than ​we do. But that does not change the fact that I remain convinced that ​the Americans are important partners for us," Merz told public broadcaster ARD in an interview due ‌to ⁠be aired later on Sunday.

Asked whether U.S. plans to reduce its troop presence in Germany had anything to do with the spat between the two leaders, Merz said, "There is no connection."

Trump called for a reduced U.S. military presence in Germany already during ​his first term and ​has repeatedly called ⁠on Europeans to take greater responsibility for their own security.

Friday's announcement is also seen as a cancellation of a plan under ​Joe Biden's administration to deploy a U.S. battalion with long-range ​Tomahawk missiles ⁠to Germany.
This is a blow to Berlin, which had pushed for the move as a powerful deterrent against Russia, while the Europeans develop such weapons of their own.

Merz said ⁠Trump had ​never committed to this plan and that it ​was unlikely the U.S. would give up such weapons systems, adding, "If I'm not mistaken, the Americans don't have ​enough themselves at the moment."

-Reuters
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