August 27, 2004
EVEN THE GERMANS MAKE MORE SENSE THAN THE DEMOCRATS:
A Strategic Divorce?: America pulls more of its troops out of Europe (CHARLES P. WALLACE, Aug. 22, 2004, TIME Europe)
When George W. Bush announced a major recall of around 70,000 U.S. troops from Europe and Asia, he kicked off an argument in the U.S. — but the reaction in Europe was muted. Challenger John Kerry said the plan shortchanges U.S. allies and the war on terrorism: "This is clearly the wrong signal to send at the wrong time," he said in a speech to veterans. But in Germany, where the cuts will hurt the most, they were portrayed as an overdue change in mission that will mostly be felt in the small towns where the soldiers are based; one trade union forecast the loss of 7,500 German jobs.Posted by Orrin Judd at August 27, 2004 10:29 AM"This is a serious loss for those regions," says Defense Minister Peter Struck. There was little criticism of the change in U.S. strategy. "Let's face it, the cold war is over," says Jean-Vincent Brisset, a military expert at France's Institute for International and Strategic Relations. "The U.S. forces came to save Europe, but their presence today doesn't fit with current doctrine."
Kerry would have us believe that this came out of the blue. We'd been discussing this with Germany, South Korea and our other allies for several years, and so this wasn't new news to them. Kerry himself had discussed troop redeployment only two weeks before expressing 'outrage' at the announcement. Pretty clearly, this took an item off his defense agenda.
Posted by: Dave Sheridan at August 29, 2004 2:09 AM