United States President Donald Trump has promised to steadily improve tariffs on European nations which have opposed his transfer to amass Greenland, escalating a dispute over the semiautonomous Danish territory he has lengthy coveted.
So what’s behind Trump’s push to manage Greenland, the world’s largest island, and the way have Washington’s NATO allies responded?
What’s Trump’s tariff menace over Greenland?
In a put up on his Fact Social platform on Saturday, Trump wrote that he has subsidised Denmark and different European Union nations by not charging them tariffs.
“Now, after Centuries, it’s time for Denmark to present again – World Peace is at stake! China and Russia need Greenland, and there’s not a factor that Denmark can do about it.”
Trump added that “the Nationwide Safety of the USA, and the World at massive, is at stake.”
Trump wrote that beginning on February 1, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Finland shall be charged a ten p.c tariff on all their exports to the US.
On June 1, the tariff is to be elevated to 25 p.c, he mentioned. “This Tariff shall be due and payable till such time as a Deal is reached for the Full and Whole buy of Greenland,” Trump wrote.
Trump moreover wrote: “The US has been making an attempt to do that transaction for over 150 years. Many Presidents have tried, and for good cause, however Denmark has all the time refused.”
Is Trump the primary US president to hunt management of Greenland?
Leaders in Denmark and Greenland have persistently insisted that Greenland shouldn’t be on the market. Prior to now few days, Greenlanders have been protesting towards Trump’s needs to amass Greenland. But Trump has pushed for buying the Arctic territory since his first time period, and he’s not the primary US president to pursue such a purchase order.
After shopping for Alaska from Russia in 1867, then-Secretary of State William H Seward unsuccessfully sought to purchase Greenland. Throughout World Warfare II, the US occupied Greenland after Germany’s invasion of Denmark and constructed army and radio amenities there. It maintains a everlasting presence right this moment on the Pituffik House Base within the northwest.
In 1946, whereas Greenland was nonetheless a Danish colony, President Harry S Truman secretly supplied Denmark $100m for the island, however Copenhagen refused. The proposal grew to become public solely in 1991.
Americans don’t help Washington buying Greenland, polls have indicated. This week, a Reuters/Ipsos ballot of US residents confirmed less than one in five respondents help the concept of buying Greenland.
Why does Trump need Greenland?
The placement and pure assets of the island make it strategically vital for Washington.
Greenland is geographically a part of North America, situated between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic Ocean. It’s residence to 56,000 residents, principally Indigenous Inuit people.
Greenland’s capital, Nuuk, is nearer to New York Metropolis – about 2,900km (1,800 miles) away – than the Danish capital, Copenhagen, situated 3,500km (2,174 miles) to the east.
It’s a NATO territory by means of Denmark and an EU-associated abroad territory with residents holding EU citizenship.
Its location provides the shortest air and sea routes between North America and Europe, making it strategically very important for US army operations and missile early-warning programs. Washington has additionally sought extra radar protection across the Greenland-Iceland-UK hole to watch Russian and Chinese language actions.
Greenland is wealthy in minerals, together with a lot of the EU’s listed “crucial uncooked supplies”, however there isn’t any oil and fuel extraction, and plenty of Indigenous residents oppose large-scale mining. The economic system primarily is determined by fishing.
As local weather change opens up extra of the Arctic, main powers such because the US, Canada, China and Russia are more and more fascinated by its untapped assets.
How has Europe responded to Trump’s tariff threats?
All 27 members of the EU will convene for an emergency assembly on Sunday to debate their response to Trump’s menace.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer responded in a put up on X on Saturday, saying: “Our place on Greenland may be very clear – it’s a part of the Kingdom of Denmark and its future is a matter for the Greenlanders and the Danes,” Starmer wrote.
“Making use of tariffs on allies for pursuing the collective safety of NATO allies is totally fallacious. We’ll in fact be pursuing this instantly with the US administration.”
European Fee President Ursula von der Leyen additionally responded in an X put up, saying: “The EU stands in full solidarity with Denmark and the folks of Greenland. Dialogue stays important, and we’re dedicated to constructing on the method begun already final week between the Kingdom of Denmark and the US.
“Tariffs would undermine transatlantic relations and threat a harmful downward spiral. Europe will stay united, coordinated, and dedicated to upholding its sovereignty.”
European Council President Antonio Costa shared a put up similar to von der Leyen’s on his personal X account.
EU overseas coverage chief Kaja Kallas wrote on X: “China and Russia should be having a area day. They’re those who profit from divisions amongst Allies.”
Kallas added: “Tariffs threat making Europe and the USA poorer and undermine our shared prosperity.”
David van Weel, the overseas minister of the Netherlands, mentioned throughout an interview on Dutch tv on Sunday: “It’s blackmail what he’s doing, … and it’s not obligatory. It doesn’t assist the alliance [NATO], and it additionally doesn’t assist Greenland.”

