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European Deterrence Initiative

US-European Security Cooperation Program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

European Deterrence Initiative
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The European Deterrence Initiative (EDI) is a United States military program initiated in June 2014, about three months after the Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation, by the White House to increase U.S. presence in Europe for security purposes.[20] "The EDI continues to enhance the presence and readiness in Europe to deter Russian aggression."[21] Created through National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, before 2017 it was known as the European Reassurance Initiative.[22]

Quick Facts European Deterrence Initiative (since July 2014), Project type ...

According to GAO, activities under initiative have enhanced U.S. military posture in U.S. EUCOM's area of responsibility by supporting the deployment of additional U.S. rotational forces and expanding the number of locations where U.S. forces operate.[23]

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Funding

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The EDI is funded through the U.S. Department of Defense. Since EDI was first proposed in Fiscal Year (FY) 2014, the initiative has provided funding in support of five lines of effort: (1) Increased Presence, (2) Exercises and Training, (3) Enhanced Prepositioning, (4) Improved Infrastructure, and (5) Building Partnership Capacity. The FY 2022 EDI budget request supports an average force strength of 9,954 active, reserve, and National Guard personnel in U.S. European Command USEUCOM, including 9,452 Army, 459 Air Force, and 43 Navy personnel. The EDI acts as one of the primary funding sources for the USEUCOM and USEUCOM Service Components to continue the posture adjustments made in response to the European security environment.[21]

  1. Continue to enhance the capability and readiness of U.S. Forces, NATO Allies, and regional partners of the U.S. for a faster response to any aggression in Europe and transnational threats by a regional adversary against the sovereign territory of NATO nations.
  2. Bolster the security and capacity of our NATO Allies and partners, enabling allied investments toward Article 3 responsibilities, and assuring the United States’ commitment to Article 5 and the territorial integrity of all NATO nations.
  3. Continue to improve theater Joint Reception, Staging, Onward Movement, and Integration (JRSO&I), ECAOS, and APS capabilities.

The initiative increased in appropriation from a $1 billion operation to $3.4 billion by 2017.[24] In May 2017, U.S. President Donald Trump proposed adding another $1.4 billion (+40%) to the appropriation.[25]

Starting from FY2022, EDI has transitioned from overseas contingency operation budgeting to the base budget, including funding of the USAI.[4] Enhanced pre-positioning of equipment, munitions, fuel, and materiel is a core focus of EDI. For fiscal year 2025, DoD requested $713 million for enhanced prepositioning for EDI. [26]

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Operations covered

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Operation Atlantic Resolve is covered by the initiative.[27] Nominated in July 2024 for the Operation commander of Security Assistance Group–Ukraine (SAG-U) is dual hatted first-holder commander of NSATU since December 2024.[17][18] Part of USEUCOM within the Operation, multinational SAG-U operates out of Wiesbaden, Germany. Joint Military Trainig Group Ukraine, among others, operates under U.S. EUCOM, U.S. Army Europe and Africa, and SAG-U: training is led by the 7ATC and executed by rotating National Guard brigade task forces, with support from units across the U.S. Army.[12]

In September 2019, a diversion of some of the funding was announced to extend the US-Mexico border wall, for fiscal years 2019-2020.[28]

Activation in 2022 of a new corps headquarters, designated V Corps, located at Fort Knox, KY, was complemented by its HQ (Forward) rotational presence in Poznan, Poland, meaning some soldiers from the unit deploy to the country on a rotating basis. As of December 2024, US Europe force posture (non- NATO units) amounted to 80,000 personnel, including rotational deployment of up to two Brigade Combat Teams in Central and Eastern Europe (with more than 9,000 troops in Poland).[13] USEUCOM reported that in the first quarter of 2025, there were no mission objectives and endstate alterations after U.S. administration change.[8]:5

According to GovWin, "the EDI is one of the investments that have helped set the stage for the U.S.’ ability to support Ukraine from Poland and Hungary... (Information) Technology plays a major role in DOD capabilities under this program."[29]

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See also

References

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