Greenland, Trump and Europe
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NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte has said "there is still a lot of work to be done" among the parties involved in the dispute over the control of Greenland, a semi-autonomous island belonging to Denmark.
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer discusses tariffs, trade and President Donald Trump's plan to acquire Greenland on 'Mornings with Maria.' The European Parliament said it is halting work on proposed U.S.-EU trade measures after lawmakers accused Washington of undermining the sovereignty of Denmark and Greenland through tariff threats.
European lawmakers said tariffs endangered the trade deal, urging suspension of the US–EU pact over Donald Trump's coercive stance
A MERICA’S HUNGER for Greenland is setting off an explosive row within NATO . President Donald Trump, infuriated by European allies’ resistance to his effort to annex the autonomous Danish territory,
Straight Arrow News (English) on MSN
US-NATO relationship is in jeopardy. So is NATO's future
President Trump announced a Greenland deal framework with NATO, reversing tariff threats against European allies. The post US-NATO relationship is in jeopardy. So is NATO's future appeared first on Straight Arrow News.
The leaders of some of America’s closest allies used the Davos summit this week to confront a new world order under President Trump in which the U.S. is an unreliable partner, at best, and increasingly viewed as an adversary.
The president's push to gain control of Greenland, a Danish territory, has created anxiety about the future of the alliance throughout Europe.
US President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that after talks with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, the US and NATO have agreed to form a framework for Arctic cooperation centered on Greenland. In a Truth Social post on Wednesday,
European Union ambassadors held an emergency meeting on Sunday, and leaders from across the 27-nation bloc will meet in Brussels later this week.
Trump, in an interview on Fox Business Network from Davos, also acknowledged the impact of his quest for Greenland on global markets and said he did not plan to pay to acquire it. "It's really being negotiated now,