BERLIN, May 4 (Reuters) - The German defence ministry said on Monday that there had ‌been no "definitive cancellation" by the United ‌States of a plan devised under former president Joe Biden ​to deploy a battalion with long-range Tomahawk missiles to Germany.

The comment comes after Washington announced last week that it would reduce its military ‌presence in Germany ⁠by 5,000 soldiers, which was widely interpreted to include cancellation of the ⁠planned deployment of weapons.

"We're not talking about a definitive cancellation," the defence ministry spokesperson said, ​adding that ​the weapons were "meant ​to be stationed (in Germany) ‌and may well still be."

He said that in any case, there were already plans underway by European nations to procure weapons systems that would fill the gap.

The Pentagon announced the ‌drawdown from Germany, its largest ​European base, on Friday, ​as a rift ​over the Iran war and tariff ‌tensions placed further strain ​on relations ​between the U.S. and Europe.

The long-range fires had been due to form a significant ​extra element of ‌deterrence against Russia while Europeans developed such ​long-range missiles themselves.

(Writing by Friederike Heine, ​Editing by Miranda Murray)