The White House is preparing a significant reduction in American forces, aircraft and warships stationed in Europe, a move the article describes as a major strategic shift. According to The New York Times, Washington wants to pressure NATO members to stop relying on the United States and build more of their own defense capacity.
The planned cuts are substantial. The number of U.S. fighter jets in Europe is set to fall by one third, from 150 to 100. Aerial refueling assets, which are essential for long-range operations, will be reduced sharply, and bomber squadrons will be moved to other regions. On the naval side, the U.S. presence of missile submarines and aircraft carrier strike groups will also be scaled back, weakening what has been the main American deterrent force in the North Sea and Baltic Sea.
NATO officials are publicly downplaying the impact, but behind the scenes they have acknowledged what they call an unhealthy dependence on U.S. capabilities. NATO spokeswoman Allison Hart suggested the move could strengthen European defense industries. The background is growing anger in Washington over what it sees as fiscal irresponsibility by European governments.
The U.S. administration has issued a blunt demand that NATO allies immediately raise defense spending to 3.5% of GDP, far above the current 2% target that many members still miss. The step comes as tensions with Russia remain high. European states are already increasing arms purchases, including Denmark’s reported $842 million buy of 200 JASSM-ER cruise missiles, but the article says Europe now faces a stark choice, spend far more on defense or risk a widening security gap with Russia.