Trump
tells Merz to ‘fix his broken country’ in new attack on German chancellor
US
president’s latest outburst comes a day after he suggested a ‘possible
reduction’ in US troops in Germany
Kate
Connolly in Berlin and Jakub Krupa
Thu 30
Apr 2026 12.37 EDT
Donald
Trump has again lashed out at Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, saying he
should focus on “fixing his broken country” and trying to end the
Russia-Ukraine war – and spend less time “interfering” in Iran.
“The
Chancellor of Germany should spend more time on ending the war with
Russia/Ukraine (Where he has been totally ineffective!),” Trump wrote in a
social media post.
Merz
should instead focus on “fixing his broken Country,” he wrote, “especially
Immigration and Energy, and less time on interfering with those that are
getting rid of the Iran Nuclear threat, thereby making the World, including
Germany, a safer place!”
Trump’s
latest outburst came a day after he suggested the US military presence in
Germany was being reviewed, with a “possible reduction” of troops under
consideration.
Between
36,000 and 39,000 US personnel are stationed in Germany, most of whom are at
its two largest bases in Stuttgart and Ramstein – much fewer than at their cold
war peak.
Trump’s
comments appear to have been prompted by Merz’s unusually blunt comments
earlier this week, when the chancellor said the US was being “humiliated” by
Iran and criticised Washington for having no exit strategy from the war.
On
Thursday, Merz sought to strike a more conciliatory tone at a visit to a German
military base in Münster, emphasising the importance of ties with Nato and the
US, and criticising Iran for refusing to take part in peace negotiations.
Without
mentioning Trump, Merz said he believed in a Nato-led solution to the conflict
in the Middle East, referring to a “reliable transatlantic partnership”.
German
officials were keen to dampen the row. Throughout Thursday they were at pains
to point out the threats from the US to withdraw troops from German soil were
far from new – Trump had made them during his first term in office – and they
were ready for them.
Speaking
on a visit to Morocco, the German foreign minister, Johann Wadephul, said not
only had Trump made such statements in the past but so, too, had presidents
Biden, Obama and Clinton.
Barack
Obama had made it clear the US would concentrate its troops more in the Pacific
zone, he said. “That might yet happen. Let’s take a look at that together,
calmly and thoroughly,” Wadephul said. He added: “We are prepared for that, we
are discussing it closely and in a spirit of trust in all Nato bodies, and we
are expecting decisions from the Americans about this.”
He said a
“shifting of forces” was already taking place, and the German military was
preparing for the changes. “We have to take on more responsibilities, we have
to develop stronger shoulders,” he added.
But he
also said it was hard to see the US withdrawing from the Ramstein airbase in
south-western Germany, as it had “an irreplaceable function for the United
States and for us alike”.
Claudia
Major, a leading expert on transatlantic security at the German Marshall Fund,
said Trump’s attempt to “use Ramstein as leverage” was nothing new. “It ties in
with the debate we had about Greenland, when the Europeans were considering how
seriously to take Trump’s threats,” she said.
While the
messages coming from the US were “very unsettling … and we wonder to what
extent it’s still reliable”, at the same time Europeans had to learn to become
less dependent on US support, she said. But this, she added, would mean “less
security and more instability for all involved”.
The
defence policy expert for Merz’s Christian Democrats, Roderich Kiesewetter,
cautioned against overreacting to Trump’s statement. “Troop reductions were
announced some time ago and are no surprise,” he told German media. “The main
thing is that they are carried out in an orderly and consensual manner.”
He said
having US troops in Germany – in particular the US’s large military hospital in
Landstuhl, the strategic hub in Ramstein and the training grounds in Grafenwöhr
– was of indispensable interest “especially for the US”.
He said
rather than primarily ensuring the defence of Germany, these locations
supported “the global American projection of power”.
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