The Pentagon suddenly terminated the deployment of over 4,000 troops to Poland this week, pulling the plug on a rotation already in progress and blindsiding much of the military leadership. The Wall Street Journal reported that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth moved faster than expected to implement President Donald Trump’s European drawdown, stopping the 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team of the 1st Cavalry Division while soldiers and equipment were already in transit.
The move followed a Pentagon announcement earlier this month that 5,000 troops would leave Germany after President Trump took issue with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s criticism of how the White House managed the U.S. war with Iran. Trump has signaled that the reductions will extend well beyond that initial figure, telling reporters “we’re cutting a lot further than 5,000” personnel from Germany and raising the possibility of withdrawals from Italy and Spain as well.
Military commanders had offered proposals for how the Germany reductions could unfold, and officials across the defense establishment assumed that changes to the American force posture would proceed deliberately. Hegseth shattered that assumption by speeding up the process. The armored unit, known as “Black Jack,” had gathered at Fort Hood, Texas only days before for a ceremony marking its upcoming deployment. “When an armored brigade combat team deploys forward, it sends a clear and unmistakable signal,” Maj. Gen. Thomas Felty, commander of the 1st Cavalry Division, declared at the event.
A Defense Department official said the cancellation was communicated during a Wednesday meeting involving U.S. European Command and the staff of U.S. Army Europe and Africa. Several Army officials expressed surprise that Hegseth chose to stop a deployment that had already begun. U.S. European Command had proposed allowing the brigade to complete its standard nine-month rotation and simply not replacing it afterward rather than halting the mission while it was underway.
The Wall Street Journal had reported a month earlier that the Trump administration was weighing the removal of American troops from certain European countries as retaliation for their failure to back the U.S. in its war with Iran. Nevertheless, the administration has preserved strong ties with Poland, and Trump floated the idea earlier this month of relocating some forces from Germany to Poland.
Polish Defense Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz wrote in a social media post that the cancellation “does not concern Poland,” explaining that “it relates to the previously announced change in the presence of some U.S. Armed Forces in Europe.” He stressed that “the rapidly developing capabilities of the Polish Armed Forces and the presence of U.S. forces in Poland strengthen NATO’s eastern flank.”
The Pentagon’s National Defense Strategy, released in January, spelled out the administration’s priorities. “As U.S. forces focus on Homeland defense and the Indo-Pacific, our allies and partners elsewhere will take primary responsibility for their own defense with critical but more limited support from American forces,” the document declared. The anticipated reductions will return U.S. troop levels in Europe to their 2022 positions before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Pentagon also recently reversed a Biden administration plan to station an Army battalion armed with long-range conventional missiles in Germany, a deployment first announced at the 2024 NATO summit in Washington. The Trump administration pulled an American combat brigade out of Romania last year.
Stopping the Black Jack brigade mid-deployment marks a promising move toward unwinding America’s bloated global military footprint, and withdrawing forces from Europe is precisely where this overdue correction should start. American taxpayers have spent generations bankrolling the security of prosperous European nations entirely capable of providing for their own defense, and every soldier posted overseas is a soldier who cannot protect American soil.
Rolling back the U.S. military presence worldwide, beginning with Europe and reaching every region where American forces serve no essential national purpose, would revive the founders’ vision of a republic that guards its own territory instead of acting as the world’s policeman.
