Explained: The US military’s global footprint

It is an unprecedented power spread, but Washington has established military bases and deployed troops across all seven continents.

A US military aircraft takes off from the US Airbase Ramstein, Germany, June 7, 2020.
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A US military aircraft takes off from the US Airbase Ramstein, Germany, June 7, 2020.

From Hollywood to Coca-Cola and Google, many of the world citizens have long felt that the US has a cultural hegemony across the globe. 

While there are different dynamics for ensuring American cultural domination, ranging from the powerful economy, to its unusual political structure, Washington’s global military presence across continents appears to be the real reason behind its worldwide supremacy. 

But the disastrous US withdrawal from Afghanistan might inflict a serious blow to Washington’s military supremacy across the world. Many experts see that the Afghanistan pullout indicates a pattern of decline for the US army’s global footprint across the globe.

America has hundreds of military bases across the world from Honduras to Australia, Japan, Iraq, Qatar to Germany, covering all continents. According to David Vine, an anthropologist at the American University, who wrote a book on American bases, the US might even maintain close to “800 military bases in more than 70 countries and territories abroad.”  

Washington keeps troops numbered around 150,000 to 200,000 abroad across more than 150 countries, according to different sources. US troop numbers vary from time to time depending on changes in policies, as well as the classified nature of military data. In 2017, the Defense Manpower Data Center notedthat the US military had at least 200,000 active-service members abroad, being deployed across 170 countries worldwide. 

Remember scenes from Hollywood movies? American special forces and CIA units conducting top-secret operations and going after anti-American counterparts?

In real life, from the capture of Iraq’s former President Saddam Hussein on home soil, to the killing of Al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan, Americans have exerted their power and standing all over the world.  

In 2016, US special forces operations happened across 138 nations, meaning Washington's clandestine units have run over territories, covering 70 percent of the globe. 

The global clout of American foreign deployments is unparalleled against any other modern nation and state in world history. In great contrast, other Western military powers, Britain, France and Russia, only “have about 30 foreign bases combined”, wrote Vine. 

“As distinct from other peoples, most Americans do not recognize—or do not want to recognize—that the United States dominates the world through its military power. Due to government secrecy, our citizens are often ignorant of the fact that our garrisons encircle the planet,”said Chalmers Johnson, a former CIA consultant. 

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A South Korean protester speaks during a rally to oppose the joint military exercises between South Korea and the US near the presidential Blue House in Seoul, South Korea, March 8, 2021.

Official numbers vs real numbers

The US government's secrecy also prevents a definite estimate of just how many American military troops operate abroad, misleading many through official numbers that differ from true troop presence in countries like Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq. 

More recently, as Washington prepares to leave Afghanistan, it was reported that there were 3,500 troops in the war-torn country, according to American, European and local officials, despite the fact that the official number stands at 2,500. 

One thousand soldiers makes an important difference in military terms because the US is able to control some territories in states like Syria with hundreds of troops, giving most military tasks to proxies like the YPG, the Syrian wing of the PKK, a terror group, according to both Washington and Ankara. 

In Syria, Washington has applied almost the same secrecy and political manoeuvring as Afghanistan, much to the dismay of President Trump. 

James Jeffrey, former special envoy to Syria, publicly acknowledged that he and his colleagues were hiding real troop numbers from the president himself. “We were always playing shell games to not make clear to our leadership how many troops we had there,” he said in an interview published last year. 

In 2019, Trump agreed to leave about two hundred troops in northern Syria ahead of a Turkish operation against the YPG/PKK, deferring to Ankara’s demands. But real numbers never decreased to 200 and were kept around 900, according to anonymous sources. 

“What Syria withdrawal? There was never a Syria withdrawal,” Jeffrey said.

In Iraq, a country which suffered hugely from the 2003 US occupation, a similar kind of secrecy continues. The US has more than 5,000 troops stationed in different locations in Iraq, according to American media accounts.Then again, experts approach that estimate with a lot of reservation.

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Protesters march towards the US Embassy in Manila, Philippines, March 20, 2012 to commemorate the 9th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq by the US. The protesters also are demanding the pullout of US troops in the Philippines as well as Asia and the Pacific.

“Except the American military officials, nobody can know the number of American forces in Iraq,” said Mehmet Bulovali, an Iraqi-Kurdish political analyst, in a previous interview. 

At the height of the invasion, there were more than 500 American military bases around the country, from Erbil, the Kurdish regional capital, to Ramadi and Baghdad, the capital of the central government. Currently, Washington keeps 12 bases across Iraq, according to military sources. 

US continental commands

Almost like ancient Rome’s different legions across the world, which ranged from Africa to central and Western Europe to its Asian territories, Washington has also established commands across the world. Overall, under the Pentagon, the US military has eleven unified combatant commands. 

The Central Command, which appears to be the most important unit among others, focuses on operations mainly based in the Middle East and Central Asia. According to the US media, Washington has troops numbering around 45,000 to 65,000 only across the Gulf. 

The greatest number of US troops, which have been estimated to be around 50,000 to 55,000, are stationed in Japan, a WWII rival of Washington, as part of the Indo-Pacific Command. In South Korea, the US has also a sizable presence with 26,000 troops. 

The European command’s headquarters is based in Germany, another rival of Washington, where the US keeps its largest foreign military presence in any country after Japan. Different estimates exist over the number of American troops in Germany, but the most recent ones point to a figure of around 33,000. After Germany, the second biggest US military presence in Europe is in Italy, an ally of Germany during WWI. 

Besides Europe, Indo-Pacific and Middle East commands, the Pentagon has also the African Command, which focuses on operations across the continent, and the Southern Command, which concentrates operations across Central and South America. 

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