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News / Nation & World

Europe still relies heavily on U.S.

By Rick Noack, The Washington Post
Published: January 26, 2017, 9:52pm

After President Donald Trump called NATO “obsolete” and criticized the European Union during an interview a week ago, German Chancellor Angela Merkel had a defiant response: “We Europeans have our fate in our own hands.”

Merkel implied that Europe doesn’t need American backing to hold its own on the world stage. But a closer look at transatlantic trade, military cooperation and lobbying shows the “old continent” still heavily relies on the U.S. — perhaps more so than some Europeans, including Merkel, are willing to admit.

Europeans who argue that a U.S.-Europe split wouldn’t make much of a difference often point to the number of American soldiers based in Europe. The ranks of American active-duty personnel there have decreased from almost 400,000 in 1953 to about 65,000 today.

Much of that decrease was after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War. American troops had stayed in Europe after the end of World War II to ensure stability and counter the Soviet Union. With the USSR’s collapse, many U.S. soldiers were no longer needed.

Most Americans based on the continent are in Germany. But there and in other E.U. countries, American soldiers are now far outnumbered by their host countries’ own troops.

So does Europe really rely on NATO without being willing to pay its share, as President Trump has claimed? Some E.U. members have indeed paid less than demanded by NATO. The alliance asks each member nation to spend 2 percent of its GDP on defense.

But a number of European nations, including Germany and France, have announced plans to boost defense budgets and to contribute more. That started before Trump became president and is unrelated to his most recent criticism of the military alliance. Merkel, for instance, announced last spring that she wanted to increase the country’s annual defense budget by $27 billion over the next three years. That would almost double the current budget, but it would still be dwarfed by the $664 billion the U.S. spends every year.

The E.U.’s economy has also grown closer and closer to the United States. The U.S. and the E.U. are each the other’s largest trading partner, and total trade between the two has increased by 50 percent during the past decade. Although President Trump likely will not pursue plans to pass a transatlantic free-trade agreement, the transatlantic economy is already tightly knit.

Closer economic ties are also behind a growing U.S. interest in having more sway over European laws. According to E.U. Integrity Watch, an NGO that monitors decision-makers in Brussels, American companies are among the top lobbyists there.

In certain countries, more than 80 percent of all films aired on TV are American. American music is similarly dominant in Europe.

In many ways, both large and small, Europe still cannot get enough of the U.S.

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