Enjoy Discounted Exercise Equipment From Leading Sales Outlets
SEARCH IT

CHANNELS
Encyclopedia Astronautica
SERVICES
 
Spacer Homebase
Bush to announce massive troop pullout from Europe, Asia
WASHINGTON (AFP) Aug 15, 2004
President George W. Bush's planned announcement Monday of the withdrawal of up to 100,000 US troops from Europe and Asia is part of a years-long process to adapt the military to post-Cold War threats, leading lawmakers said Sunday.

"This is a decision that's been under review by the secretary of defense for about three or four years," Senator John Warner, the Virginia Republican who heads the armed services committee, told CNN.

"The vestiges, the remnants of the Cold War are still present in a lot of our military installations in Europe, and it's time to lighten up our military equipment in Europe, get the heavy stuff back here so it can be redeployed to where it might be needed," he said.

The committee's top Democrat, Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, said he would probably support the proposal, though he had not yet seen the plan's deails.

"In terms of the general direction that it's taking ... this has been in the works for a long time, and there are some things that we should do to redeploy troops so that they are in the best position possible for what the new threats are," he said.

Although parts of the plan are still being finalized, the redeployment will most significantly affect US forces in Germany and South Korea, which served as a bulwark against the threat of communist aggression during the Cold War.

Tens of thousands of US troops are expected to be pulled out from these and other countries in the next three to four years and redeployed to bases in the United States, administration officials told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"This initiative will strengthen our ability to address threats abroad, improve our capability to protect America and our allies, and will ease some of the burden on our uniformed military members and their families," said one administration official, who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity.

The United States has about 100,000 troops deployed in Europe and about the same number in Asia, outside Iraq and Afghanistan. There are about 70,000 troops in Germany, 37,500 in South Korea and 48,000 in Japan.

The president is scheduled to make a speech Monday at a Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Cincinnati, Ohio.

The New York Times reported Sunday that the president will announce that he supports the Defense Department reorganization which would see up to 70,000 troops withdrawn.

He will also say that it could affect an additional 100,000 military support staff and family members in the regions, the report said quoting an administration official.

A Japanese business daily reported Sunday that Tokyo and Washington were drawing up a new security framework on their military cooperation against terrorism and other threats.

Washington is considering relocating the headquarters of its Army's 1st Corps to Camp Zama in Kanagawa, west of Tokyo, and integrating the 13th Air Force Command in Guam into the Yokota Air Force Base in the capital, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun said, quoting sources close to the matter.

US forces are stretched thin in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the plan has been actively pushed by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who has stepped up calls for a radical new military posture since the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.

Top Pentagon officials have for months been quietly selling the initiative to Congress, in a bid to soothe concerns that the redeployment could further fray US relations with key NATO allies.

Defense Undersecretary Douglas Feith told a House hearing in June that the US military intended to retain but consolidate its main bases in Germany, Italy, Britain, Japan and South Korea.

In addition, it planned to rely on so-called "forward operating sites" containing pre-positioned military equipment that could be quickly converted into full-fledged bases, if the need arised, he said.

One such new site under consideration is in Bosnia-Herzegovina at what is now known as Eagle Base outside Tuzla, according to defense officials.

In Asia, the United States has already announced the reduction 12,500 US troops in South Korean and plans to consolidate facilities and headquarters in Japan.

One of the plans calls for stationing a second aircraft carrier group -- on top of the one led by the USS Kitty Hawk -- in the Asia-Pacific region to deal with the threat posed by North Korea and its nuclear ambitions, officials said.

All rights reserved. Copyright 2003 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.

Quick Links
SpaceWar
Search SpaceWar
Subscribe To SpaceWar Express

SpaceWar Search Engine
SUBSCRIBE TO THE SPACEWAR NEWSLETTER
SubscribeUnsubscribe
  

WAR.WIRE
  • Pentagon chief says US could 'revive' Panama bases
  • US approves $1bn missile sale to Australia
  • Hegseth says US could 'revive' Panama troop deployments
  • Israel says seizing 'large areas' of Gaza as strike kills 23
  • Yemen rebel media says US strikes on Hodeida killed 12: new toll
  • Iraq signs deal with US firm to produce 24,000 MW of electricity
  • Estonian MPs approve bill to boost maritime security
  • Israel's defence minister says troops seizing 'large areas' in Gaza, expanding buffer zones
  • Pentagon chief in Panama vows to counter China 'threat'
  • Trump tells US to 'be cool' as China, EU strike back
    SPACEDAILY NEWS
     Feb 11, 2005
  • NASA Observations Help Determine Titan Wind Speeds
  • Cassini Spacecraft Witnesses Saturn's Blues
  • US Orientation Engine Fails On ISS
  • NASA Names Two Future Space Shuttle Crews
  • Simulations Show How Growing Black Holes Regulate Galaxy Formation
  • In The Stars: Odd Stars, Odder Planets
  • Natural Climate Change May Be Larger Than Commonly Thought
  • Earth Gets A Warm Feeling All Over
  • Satamatics Flying At Over 50,000 Terminals
  • Digital Angel To Expand OuterLink Subsidiary's Flight Tracking System
  • LockMart Delivers First Modernized GPS Satellite To USAF For May Launch
  • World's Fastest Oscillating Nanomachine Holds Promise For Quantum Computing
  • Carnegie Mellon's Red Team Seeks $2 Million Robot Racing Prize
  • Kionix Ships The World's Smallest High-Performance Tri-Axis Accelerometer
  • Northrop Grumman/Raytheon Team To Compete For GOES-R System
  • Blue Planet: The Fading Songs Of Whales
  • New Cameras Turn Night Into Day
  • North Korea Suspends Talks, Says It Will Build More Nuclear Bombs
  • Analysis: How Super Is The Superpower?
  • Walker's World: Why Rice Should Thank Zarqawi
  • NATO Agrees Expansion Of Afghan Force
  • North Korea Probably Bluffing Over Nuclear Threat: Australia
  • US Options Seen Limited Against Nuclear-Armed North Korea
  • Six Iraqi Policemen Killed, US Helicopters Fire Missiles To End Siege
  • Germany And Malaysia Urge Peace In Tsunami-Ravaged Aceh
  • Task Of Collecting Indonesia's Tsunami Dead Will Take Six Months: Red Cross
  • EU Brings Forward Preferential Trade Scheme For Developing Countries
  • Cambodia's Former Forestry Monitor Blasts World Bank Over Logging
  • Thales Posts Lower Sales In 2004, Missing Own Target
  • Rolls-Royce Profits Rise; Orders At Record Levels

  • The contents herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2002 - SpaceDaily. AFP Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement