Illustration depicting Donald Trump announcing tariffs on European nations over Greenland dispute, with maps and flags.
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Trump threatens eight European countries with tariffs over Greenland

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US President Donald Trump has promised to impose additional 10% tariffs starting February 1 on eight European countries, including France, in response to their support for Denmark over Greenland. These tariffs could rise to 25% in June until an agreement on acquiring the island. Emmanuel Macron denounced these threats as unacceptable and vowed a united European response.

On January 17, 2026, Donald Trump announced via Truth Social the imposition of additional 10% tariffs starting February 1 on imports from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Finland. These measures aim to force these countries to withdraw support for Denmark regarding Greenland, a Danish autonomous territory strategic in the Arctic. The tariffs would increase to 25% on June 1 and remain in place until an agreement allows the United States to fully acquire the island.

Trump justifies these actions on national security grounds, stating that 'world peace is at stake' and that China and Russia threaten the Arctic. He criticized NATO allies for deploying symbolic troops to the island the previous week, claiming they are playing 'a very dangerous game.' Since returning to power a year ago, Trump has eyed Greenland to counter Russian and Chinese advances, vowing to seize it 'one way or another.'

The European response was swift. Emmanuel Macron stated on X that 'tariff threats are unacceptable' and that 'Europeans will respond in a united and coordinated manner.' He added: 'No intimidation or threat can influence us, neither in Ukraine, nor in Greenland, nor anywhere else in the world.' Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen expressed surprise and noted that the military reinforcement aims to enhance Arctic security. The European Union warned of a 'dangerous spiral,' while British Prime Minister Keir Starmer called it a 'very bad thing' and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson affirmed: 'We will not be intimidated.'

This escalation could create unprecedented tensions within NATO, with the United States using economic sanctions against an ally to seize a territory attached to a partner. According to economist Ruben Nizard, these threats resemble more of a diplomatic maneuver than a pure trade war, lacking a clear economic rationale.

Hva folk sier

Discussions on X predominantly criticize Trump's tariff threats on eight European countries (Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, UK, Netherlands, Finland) as insane bullying that damages NATO alliances and raises consumer prices. Supporters view it as essential for US national security, Arctic dominance, and rare earth minerals against China/Russia. Skeptics question feasibility amid European unity. High-profile opposition from US senators and Bernie Sanders; some MAGA accounts praise America First strategy.

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Illustration of Trump announcing tariffs on Europe to pressure Denmark over Greenland, with maps, flags, and trade war symbols.
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Trump threatens escalating tariffs on European nations over Greenland

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

President Donald Trump has announced tariffs on eight European countries and allies to pressure Denmark into selling Greenland, citing national security concerns. The move, escalating tensions ahead of the Davos forum, has prompted strong backlash from European leaders, who are considering retaliatory measures. A previous US-EU trade deal now hangs in the balance.

USAs president Donald Trump har truet åtte land, inkludert Sverige, med 10 prosent toll fra 1. februar for å presse fram kjøpet av Grønland. Ledere i de berørte nasjonene fordømmer tiltaket som uakseptabelt og understreker at Grønland er del av Danmark. EU planlegger et samlet svar og diskuterer mottiltak.

Rapportert av AI

US President Donald Trump has announced tariffs of initially ten percent against Germany and seven other European countries opposing his takeover plans for Greenland. The measures are set to take effect from February and rise to 25 percent later, until a purchase agreement is reached. European leaders criticize the threat as unacceptable and are consulting on a unified response.

U.S. President Donald Trump has announced a framework for a future deal on Greenland and the Arctic region at Davos. He emphasized it is for security reasons, though ambitions over natural resources are evident. This marks a retreat from his earlier aggressive stance.

Rapportert av AI

One day after a joint European declaration defending Greenland's sovereignty and Denmark's military buildup announcement, the Trump administration intensified pressure with explicit mentions of military options to seize the Arctic island, prompting NATO alliance fears.

Leaders from France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain and the United Kingdom issued a joint statement on Tuesday, January 6, 2026, with Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen rejecting U.S. President Donald Trump’s renewed push for American control of Greenland and stressing that the island’s future is for Greenlanders and Denmark to decide, not Washington.

Rapportert av AI

USAs president Donald Trump har annonsert en ramme for en fremtidig avtale om Grønland og Arktis etter et møte med NATOs generalsekretær Mark Rutte i Davos. Avtalen vektlegger sikkerhetssamarbeid og tilgang til mineraler, uten amerikansk eierskap av øya. Som svar trår Trump tilbake fra planlagte tollsatser på europeiske land, inkludert Sverige.

 

 

 

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