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Goodbye Elvis? Town by US German base hopes for Biden reprieve

AFP
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Goodbye Elvis? Town by US German base hopes for Biden reprieve
Birgit Plössner, head of culture at the Military Museum, poses next to an exhibit showing Elvix Presley's only performance outside the US. Photo: Christof Stache/AFP

When the United States announced last year that it would be withdrawing troops from Germany, shockwaves rippled through the country -- but nowhere more than in the Bavarian town of Grafenwöhr.

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For the town located on the edge of the most important US army base in Europe, hope was revived in November by the election of Democrat Joe Biden as the next US president.
   
But much remains at stake for the community known as "Little America", whose prosperity has depended on the presence of US troops since the end of World War II 75 years ago.
   
"Grafenwöhr is nothing without the US soldiers," said Piri Bradshaw, whose parents run an Irish pub in the town centre.
   
Establishments like this have become the life and soul of Grafenwöhr, where traditional barbers stand alongside tattoo parlours -- not to mention the many bars and restaurants that were doing a roaring trade before Covid-19 came along.
   
On one street corner, a BMW dealership offers a "military discount".
   
"Imagine, we have seven supermarkets -- far too many for a town of 6,500 inhabitants," Bradshaw points out.
   
But someone has to feed the 40,000 soldiers and their families who live in and around the base.
 

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Roaring of gunfire
   
In the town centre, a few old buildings still bear witness to Grafenwöhr's distant past as a quiet rural community -- but the roaring of gunfire quickly brings visitors back to the present.
   
"We are used to it and sometimes don't even hear it anymore," said Birgit Plössner, head of culture at the Military Museum, pointing out that a training camp was set up here as early as 1908.
   
The US set up a permanent base near the town after the defeat of the Nazis, but the country's overall military presence in Germany has declined from some 200,000 soldiers in 1990 to 34,500 today.
   
Although the prospect had been looming for years, President Donald Trump's decision in July to redeploy 12,000 soldiers from Germany -- including some 5,000 from Grafenwöhr and the neighbouring town of Vilseck -- still came as a shock.
   
Even a small reduction in troops would have "serious" economic consequences for the town, according to Grafenwöhr mayor Edgar Knobloch.   
 
"The base provides employment for more than 3,000 civilians in the region," he told AFP.
   
In addition, the troops spend about 660 million euros a year in the local community.
   
The election of Biden and the suspension of troop withdrawals pending further analysis by the Pentagon has been a great "relief" for the town, Knobloch said.
   
"Our troubles are not over, but I am confident that the decision will be in our favour," he said.
   
Knobloch believes such a decision would also be in the interests of the US, which has invested heavily in recent years to modernise the base.
   
Soldiers are trained at Grafenwöhr before being sent on missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the armies of NATO member countries also train there regularly.
 

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Plastic Elvis
 
And the base does not only have economic value. "Three generations of US soldiers have followed one another here, sometimes even from father to son," said Plössner.
   
They include the King himself, Elvis Presley, who did most of his military service in Germany.
   
During his time in Grafenwöhr, Presley even gave a private concert in a bar -- the only one in Europe in his entire career.
   
The town museum has lovingly recreated the scene with the original piano and a plastic Elvis.
   
The presence of the US soldiers permeates every aspect of cultural and social life in the town.
   
"We celebrate US Independence Day like the Maibaum," Plössner said, referring to a popular Celtic Maypole festival in Bavaria.
   
"There is a real understanding between people here," adds Knobloch, with some soldiers even returning to settle in the area after they leave the army.
   
Raymond Tavarez Gascot is one of them. A year after retiring from the army, the Puerto Rico-born former paratrooper returned to Grafenwöhr in 2007, got married and fulfilled his dream of setting up a garage.
   
"I fell in love with the country, the culture," said the 45-year-old, though he admits to still struggling with the language.
   
"Yes I miss the weather, the beach, the sun," he said. But "the reality is you can't compare the quality of life".

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Anonymous 2021/01/02 20:34
It's not the first time that they've threatened to close down this base. I know. I've lived here for 33 years. This is all about the economy, and it's profit. I see this as hypocritical as well. There was a time when Germans around this town complained about the noise at night during artillery, tanks firing, and helicopters firing their missiles. It was then mentioned as possibly closing. Many Germans then "freaked" out, such as now. Similar situation in Baumholder. A pair of drunk Soldiers once burned the town's Rathaus after beating up a cab driver and harassing an old lady. They also threatened to close the town. And they "freaked" out, begging them to remain. Sound's very familiar. I wish them the best of luck.

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