Special Report

Countries Where America Has the Most Soldiers Stationed

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Although the United States had overseas bases as early as 1903, with the establishment of Guantánamo Bay Naval Station, in Cuba, they didn’t begin expanding their reach even greater until World War II and the Cold War, when they began setting up a network of overseas bases. Today, the U.S. has by far the world’s largest overseas military network, with about 750 bases in 80 countries. About 60% of these bases are larger than 10 acres or worth more than $10 million, and they typically house at least 200 military personnel. The remaining 40% are smaller bases, known as “Lily Pads.” The countries with the most U.S. troops are all close allies of the United States, and their military bases play an important role in U.S. global security operations.

24/7 Wall St. reviewed Aljazeera’s report: Infographic: US military presence around the world to find the nations where America has the most soldiers Countries, including one U.S. territory, are ordered by the number of troops, with data as of July 2021, and the most recent data available as of September 2023. Total bases per country also come from the report. The number of troops in Iraq was adjusted to reflect more recent information.

Based on data from the Conflict Management and Peace Science Journal in 2020, the United States had approximately 173,000 troops stationed across 159 countries. However, the majority of these active American service members, around 160,000 of them, were stationed in 14 countries and Guam, an unincorporated Pacific island territory under U.S. jurisdiction. (While the American military is large, it is not the largest. This is the country with the largest military.)

U.S. military presence abroad is among the largest in Germany and Japan, both of which were enemies of the United States in World War II. What initially began as U.S. military occupations of these defeated Axis powers in the post-war years has since transformed into cooperative relationships with close ties in military, political, and economic aspects.

Due to regular redeployments, the specific numbers of U.S. troops at these bases may fluctuate, but these estimates provide insight into where the United States places its highest priorities in terms of global security operations. For instance, the number of U.S. troops in Germany has been gradually decreasing, while their presence in Italy, closer to the Middle East and North Africa, has been on the rise. This shift reflects changes in the focus of U.S. global security efforts following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the ongoing global war on terror. (This is the year most Americans died in war.)

Among the top 15 countries hosting the largest U.S. overseas military contingents, seven are within the North American Treaty Organization (NATO), four are situated in the Asia-Pacific region, including Guam, three are in the Middle East, and the oldest overseas naval base operated by the United States can be found in the Caribbean: the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba.

Here are the countries where America has the most soldiers stationed.

15. Cuba

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  • Number of US troops: 731
  • Number of US bases: 1 – #14 most

The Guantanamo Bay Naval Base is the oldest overseas United States Naval Base. The 45-square-mile compound has been leased since 1903 and has endured through the 1959 Cuban Revolution that brought Soviet-aligned communists to power in the Caribbean Sea’s largest island country.

Since 2002, the base has housed an offshore detention camp for hundreds of prisoners from the global war on terror, mostly Afghans, Saudis, and Yemenis. According to a May report by Human Rights Watch, 36 prisoners still remain at the facility, and only two of them have been convicted of a crime.

14. Norway

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  • Number of US troops: 733
  • Number of US bases: 7 – #12 most

As original members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the U.S. and Norway have close military ties. Norway’s neighbors Sweden and Finland have remained unaligned to NATO until recently, making Norway the northernmost member of the military alliance. It is also a strategic area for the U.S. and other allies to maintain a military presence in and near Europe’s Arctic region in close proximity to northern Russia.

13. Australia

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  • Number of US troops: 1,085
  • Number of US bases: 7 – #11 most

Australia was a fighting ally of the United States in every conflict of the past century, including World War I. The two countries cooperate in Eastern Hemisphere security operations and agreements. Since 2012, more than 8,000 U.S. Marines have trained alongside the Australian Defense Force, according to the U.S. State Department.

12. Belgium

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  • Number of US troops: 1,147
  • Number of US bases: 11 – #9 most

The U.S. maintains military operations in five European countries, including Belgium. Belgium hosts slightly more U.S. troops after Norway. U.S. bases in the fifth-smallest European Union country by population include U.S. Army Garrison Benelux, an abbreviation for Belgium and its neighbors Netherlands and Luxembourg. USAG Benelux is one of the most important in the area because it supports complementary bases located in France, Germany, and the U.K.

11. Turkey

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  • Number of US troops: 1,685
  • Number of US bases: 13 – #7 most

Relations between the U.S. and Turkey, a NATO member since 1952, have cooled considerably under President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his authoritarian style of leadership. But Turkey is also a strategic location for the U.S. military in a region wrought with instability. The future of Incirlik Air Base, one of the most important American outposts in the region, is murky as Turkey forges closer ties to Russia.

10. Iraq

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  • Number of US troops: 2,500
  • Number of US bases: Unknown

Nearly 11 years after the end of the Second Gulf War and more than two years after U.S. President Donald Trump began scaling down U.S. military presence in Iraq, the U.S. still maintains troops on the ground as Islamic State fighters are still active in the country and in neighboring Syria. Last year, Military Times described the U.S. presence as a “strict advise-and-assist role at the invitation of the Iraqi government.”

9. Kuwait

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  • Number of US troops: 2,169
  • Number of US bases: 10 – #10 most

More than three decades after a U.S.-led coalition rescued Kuwait from the Iraqi invasion and protected the area’s oil fields from Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s clutches, the U.S. maintains a strong military presence in the Gulf state of 4.2 million people that is situated between Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. The largest U.S. base is Camp Arifjan, south of Kuwait City, where members of all branches of the U.S. military as well as military personnel from allied countries are forward deployed.

8. Spain

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  • Number of US troops: 3,168
  • Number of US bases: 4 – #13 most

The European Union’s fourth-largest country by population also has the third-largest U.S. military presence in the 27-nation trading bloc, after Germany and Italy. The U.S. presence is anchored by two large bases: Naval Station Rota in southern Cádiz province (aka the “Gateway to the Mediterranean”) and Morón Air Base near the southeastern city of Seville.

7. Bahrain

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  • Number of US troops: 3,731
  • Number of US bases: 12 – #8 most

The tiny island in the Arabian Gulf has been designated by the U.S. a “major non-NATO ally.” Iran has periodically laid claim to Bahrain due to the island’s historic ties to Persia. Bahrain offers an enticing strategic location for the U.S. military, situated near Saudi Arabia’s major oil fields and vital shipping channels between two adversarial states, Saudi Arabia and Iran.

6. Guam

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  • Number of US troops: 6,140
  • Number of US bases: 54 – #4 most

Guam is an unincorporated territory of the United States whose people are American citizens, so technically U.S. military troops and bases in Guam are not “overseas.” However, the island is closer to the Philippines than to Hawaii, making U.S. military installations and troops there distant from the contiguous United States – much farther away from home than the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. Guam’s strategic location – which puts it within range of North Korean missiles – has turned it into the largest U.S. military outpost in the Pacific Region outside of Japan.

5. United Kingdom

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  • Number of US troops: 9,274
  • Number of US bases: 25 – #6 most

The U.S. military presence in the United Kingdom is the largest outside of continental Europe and Asia and dates back to 1942 when Britain invited the Americans to use Royal Air Force airfields. Today, the U.S. operates numerous bases in Britain, such as the extensive RAF Alconbury military base in Cambridgeshire, about 60 miles from London. This and other bases are operated by the U.S., but the rules and regulations are created and enforced by the British government.

4. Italy

  • Number of US troops: 12,247
  • Number of US bases: 44 – #5 most

Italy’s proximity to the Middle East, North Africa, and Eastern Europe has made it an ideal location for the U.S. to plant one of its largest centers of military power abroad. While Germany remains home to Europe’s largest U.S. overseas military infrastructure, the U.S. has pivoted toward southern Europe since the global war on terror began after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The U.S. maintains numerous military complexes in Italy, from Naples and Sicily in the south to Aviano and Pisa in the north.

3. South Korea

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  • Number of US troops: 25,414
  • Number of US bases: 73 – #3 most

Though the Korean War technically ended in 1953, the two Koreas have never signed a peace treaty, which has made the Korean Peninsula one of the world’s hot spots for a potential military eruption. The United States maintains one of its largest military presences abroad in South Korea, assuring that any attack from the Hermit Kingdom in the north would immediately involve the U.S. in direct military confrontation. The largest U.S. overseas military base is Camp Humphreys, a U.S. Army garrison located about 40 miles south of Seoul.

2. Germany

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  • Number of US troops: 33,948
  • Number of US bases: 119 – #2 most

Germany has been vital to U.S. military strategy in Europe since the end of World War II, through the decade-long post-war Allied occupation of the county and the tumultuous years of the Cold War that divided Germany. The U.S. European Command, the coordinator of all American forces in 51 countries, is headquartered in the southwestern city of Stuttgart.

Germany remains home to the second-largest U.S. overseas military presence in the world, but the number of American active service members there has declined in recent years as the U.S. responds to a “shifting and increasingly global security situation,” reported German news agency Deutsche Welle in 2020.

1. Japan

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  • Number of US troops: 53,713
  • Number of US bases: 120 – #1 most

Recent tensions between the People’s Republic of China and the U.S., which included a recent military exercise by China, including reportedly a ballistic missile launched into Japanese waters, all but assure a continued robust U.S. military footprint in Japan.

The country has long hosted the largest U.S. overseas military presence in the world. U.S. Forces Japan is headquartered at Yokota Air Base in Fussa City, in western Tokyo, where operations supporting the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command are centered. The command is similar to the U.S. European Command in Stuttgart, Germany.

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