U.S. Decides to "Strike" Germany Again: NATO Ally May Lose Tomahawk Missiles!
The Financial Times reported on May 3.
Trump has decided to withdraw 5,000 soldiers from Germany and indicated that even larger cuts may follow.
This move has shocked Europe, and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz clearly seems to be facing adversity.
Yesterday, over 360,000 Germans took to the streets for May Day labor demonstrations.
Many participants in the march organized by the German Trade Union Confederation held signs demanding Merz's resignation.
Now, the United States is once again "striking" Germany: NATO allies may lose Tomahawk missiles.
The U.S. may abandon its plan to deploy an Army unit equipped with long-range missiles in Germany.
According to reports, the reason behind this decision is the impending large-scale reduction of U.S. military forces stationed in Germany.
As reported by multiple authoritative media outlets, the U.S. and Germany reached an agreement in July 2024 to gradually deploy long-range fire systems—including Tomahawk cruise missiles—in Germany starting in 2026, marking the first return of U.S. land-based medium-range missiles to Germany since the end of the Cold War.
The publication reported that this deployment plan for Tomahawk cruise missiles is now under threat, and Washington may ultimately revoke its previous decision.
Poland has described this move as a catastrophic trend.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk expressed serious concern on his social media account.
He pointed out that the greatest threat currently facing the transatlantic alliance is not external enemies, but rather the process of internal disintegration.
Original source: toutiao.com/article/1864169570302985/
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author.
