NATO leaders to meet after Trump restates Greenland claim
Trump dashed hopes of an two-day summit by telling reporters the US should "control" Greenland. The Danish prime minister hit back, calling on the US to "respect Danish sovereignty".
Allies are bracing themselves for a difficult second-day after US President Donald Trump restated his usual insults against NATO countries despite a historic surge in European and Canadian defence spending.
Not long after Trump landed yesterday afternoon, he revived his claim from earlier this year that Greenland, the semi-autonomous Arctic territory of Denmark, “should be controlled by the United States.”
He went on to criticise Denmark for underinvesting in defence of the island, saying Copenhagan "doesn't spend money to really help Greenland", implying it can’t defend the massive island against Russian or Chinese vessels he claims are operating in the region.
Arriving at the summit Wednesday morning, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen reiterated her country's stance that "Greenland is of course not for sale".
"We are a sovereign state and we need everyone to respect our territorial integrity," she said.
Asked if Denmark would militarily defend Greenland if there was an attack, she answered: "we are ready to defend all of NATO, that includes our own territory."
"Of course we will defend the Kingdom of Denmark," said Frederiksen. "The Greenlanders do not want to be part of the United States. They have made that clear," she said.
Numerous polls conducted among Greenlanders show an overwhelming resistance against being part of US territory.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte sidestepped the issue when asked by reporters, saying that "when it comes to Greenland and Denmark, we have a good process in place".
Last January, when Trump's threats to annex the territory hit a peak, Rutte ensured the matter was absent from official NATO business, instead resolving the matter via shuttle diplomacy between all sides.
It is thus highly unlikely the Greenland issue will appear on the formal agenda when leaders get down to formal business at around 11:15 at the North Atlantic Council (NAC), the principal decision-making body within NATO. Trump will be seated at the same table as Frederiksen.
"The approach will be not to mention the issue, and get through the end of the summit," a source with knowledge of the situation told Euronews.
"I hope they cancel next year's summit, two more years of this with Trump will be so damaging to NATO and security," they said, lamenting that the alliance's attempts to placate Trump are not working. "Trump only wants to pile on pressure, and he's just getting even more outspoken."