NATO · 2 posts
Lede Brief 9h ago

Poland Wants Our Troops. The Question Is Who Decides.

Poland's defense minister said Saturday that Warsaw is prepared to accept additional American troops to reinforce NATO's eastern flank — a direct response to President Trump's signaling that U.S. forces may shift out of Germany.

Said Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz: "Poland is ready to accept additional American troops in order to strengthen NATO's eastern flank and provide even better protection for Europe."

The Founders placed the war power in Congress for a reason. Repositioning thousands of American sons and daughters across an alliance theater is not a boardroom transaction. Eisenhower's farewell warned us that the machinery of permanent military presence develops its own momentum — its own budget lines, its own contractors, its own gravitational pull on policy. Before the next flag goes up on Polish soil, the republic deserves a vote in Article I, not just a post on X.

Source: Bloomberg Politics ForeignPolicyNATOExecutive
Brief 2d ago

Germany Has Enjoyed Our Shield. It's Time They Pay for It.

President Trump announced plans to cut American troop levels in Germany beyond the Pentagon's previously stated withdrawal of roughly 5,000 soldiers. Speaking to reporters in Florida, Trump said: "We're going to cut way down. And we're cutting a lot further than 5,000" — offering no timeline or final number.

The announcement sharpens an ongoing dispute with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz over who bears the cost of European security. Germany, the continent's largest economy, has spent decades sheltering behind American soldiers and American taxpayers.

Eisenhower warned in his farewell address that permanent overseas commitments — built to serve contractor balance sheets as much as national defense — would hollow out the republic from within. The question worth asking is not how many troops we pull back, but whether Congress, under its Article I war powers, has ever formally authorized this posture — or whether the boardroom and the bureaucracy simply kept renewing it without asking the American people.

Source: New York Post ForeignPolicyNATOWarPowers