US to cut air and naval assets deployed for NATO operations in Europe
The United States plans to significantly reduce its air and naval assets deployed for NATO operations in Europe. This includes cutting approximately 50 fighter jets, reducing maritime surveillance aircraft, and withdrawing eight aerial refuelling aircraft.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe United States plans to significantly reduce its air and naval assets deployed for NATO operations in Europe. This includes cutting approximately 50 fighter jets, reducing maritime surveillance aircraft, and withdrawing eight aerial refuelling aircraft. Additionally, an aircraft carrier, a bomber task force group, and several warships will be relocated, along with a submarine. This drawdown is part of a broader US strategy to shift resources towards the Middle East, Asia, and the Americas. NATO officials acknowledged the planned reductions, stating they are aware of some changes and framing them as beneficial for long-term sustainability and reducing over-dependence on a single ally.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThis change strengthens NATO’s defence plans by reducing over-dependence on one ally.
The United States plans to cut air and naval assets designated to NATO operations in Europe.
Eight aerial refuelling aircraft are also expected to be withdrawn completely.
The US plans to cut maritime surveillance aircraft from 26 to 15.
The US intends to decrease the number of F-16 and F-15E fighter jets allocated to NATO from about 150 to 100.