Published: 17 January 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
The escalating crisis over Greenland may prove to be the defining moment when Europe is finally compelled to stand up to Donald Trump, even as it remains heavily dependent on the United States for its security. European officials have warned that any US attempt to annex the vast Arctic territory would represent an unprecedented breach of international norms and could fatally undermine the transatlantic alliance that has underpinned Nato for more than seven decades.
For nearly a year, European leaders have absorbed Trump’s confrontational style with notable restraint. They have tolerated his relentless demands that Nato members raise defence spending to 5% of GDP, despite the political and economic strain this would impose on many governments. They have also responded cautiously to his threats to withdraw or condition US support for Ukraine on a peace settlement widely seen as favouring Russia. Even episodes of American adventurism abroad, including the controversial capture and rendition of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, have been met with muted criticism from European capitals.
This accommodating approach has often bordered on public deference. Several European leaders have competed for the role of informal intermediary to Trump, hoping personal rapport might soften his demands. The most striking example came last June, when Nato secretary general Mark Rutte referred to the US president as “daddy” during a summit, a remark that caused unease across European diplomatic circles. Yet while trade disputes, defence budgets and even Ukraine have been treated as negotiable terrain, Greenland has emerged as something fundamentally different.
Trump’s repeated and increasingly forceful insistence that Denmark should cede or sell Greenland has triggered one of the gravest crises in the history of the transatlantic partnership. The island, a semi-autonomous territory within the Danish realm, is not only strategically vital but also symbolic of European sovereignty. For many European officials, the idea that a Nato ally could openly seek to acquire another ally’s territory crosses a line that cannot be ignored.
“The president’s ambition is on the table,” Denmark’s foreign minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, said after tense talks in Washington with US officials. “Of course we have our red lines. This is 2026. You trade with people, but you don’t trade people.” His words captured the growing resolve in Copenhagen and beyond. Following the meeting with US vice-president JD Vance and secretary of state Marco Rubio, Rasmussen and Greenland’s foreign minister, Vivian Motzfeldt, were seen outside the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, visibly strained after hours of high-stakes diplomacy.
According to Kristine Berzina, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund focusing on US defence and transatlantic security, the Greenland dispute has crystallised Europe’s sense of vulnerability and responsibility. “When it comes to Greenland, the Europeans have found a red line they really want to stand by,” she said. “Everything else has been subject to negotiation, but this goes to sovereignty and to whether Europe is capable of standing up for its own territory and rights.”
That resolve, however, is tempered by reality. Europe remains deeply dependent on the United States for its security, particularly through Nato’s military infrastructure and nuclear umbrella. Latvia’s former prime minister, Krišjanis Kariņš, warned that this dependency leaves Europe at a diplomatic disadvantage. Any serious escalation, he argued, could provoke retaliation from Washington, especially in trade. At the end of the day, he said, Europe still needs the US, even as it tries to defend its own interests.
The pressure on Danish and Greenlandic officials has been immense. Motzfeldt, speaking a day after the Washington talks, admitted she had been emotionally overwhelmed by the pace and intensity of negotiations. Observers note that Denmark has long been a loyal ally of the United States, making Trump’s approach all the more shocking. Marisol Maddox, a senior fellow at Dartmouth University’s Arctic studies institute, described the situation as akin to a betrayal by a close friend. There had been no provocation, she said, and no indication that Denmark had failed in its alliance commitments.
Trump’s fascination with Greenland is not new, but it has intensified dramatically. The idea was first floated to him in 2019 by Ronald Lauder, heir to the Estée Lauder cosmetics empire and a longtime associate. Since returning to power, Trump has reframed the issue as a matter of national security, citing concerns about Russian and Chinese activity in the Arctic. Yet he has also been unusually candid about the personal dimension, telling the New York Times that owning Greenland was “psychologically needed for success”. Last week, he went further, threatening tariffs against countries that refused to support his ambitions.
Within the US administration, some officials appear to see the Greenland issue as an opportunity to challenge European allies more broadly. European diplomats have expressed particular concern about JD Vance’s involvement in the negotiations, interpreting it as a sign that the White House is prepared to escalate tensions. Several diplomats have suggested that Vance relishes confrontation with Europe, and few believe he can be persuaded to soften his stance.
In response, Europe has begun to act more assertively, seeking to undermine the central argument used by the Trump administration: that Greenland is insufficiently protected from external threats. This week, a small French military contingent arrived on the island as part of a broader, limited Nato deployment that includes troops from Germany, Sweden, Norway, Finland, the Netherlands and the UK. Denmark’s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, emphasised that the defence of Greenland is a shared Nato responsibility, not a justification for unilateral action.
Kariņš argued that strengthening Greenland’s security could remove a key pretext for annexation. By demonstrating that Europe takes Arctic defence seriously, Nato allies hope to neutralise claims that only the US can guarantee the island’s safety. Yet military measures alone may not be enough to deter Trump, whose record suggests a willingness to pursue objectives regardless of diplomatic norms.
Beyond defence deployments, European policymakers are debating a range of diplomatic and economic responses. Some have proposed convening an international summit on Arctic security in Nuuk, co-hosted by Denmark and Greenland with participation from EU and non-EU partners such as the UK, Canada and Norway, as well as the US itself. Others have floated more confrontational options, including delaying ratification of the EU–US trade deal agreed last year at Trump’s Turnberry golf resort. Supporters of this idea argue that proceeding with the vote would appear to reward aggressive behaviour, though resistance within the European parliament makes such a move unlikely.
Official EU rhetoric remains cautious. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen has continued to describe the US as an ally and partner, even while reaffirming support for Greenland. She highlighted plans to deepen EU engagement with the island, including the opening of a permanent EU office in Nuuk and proposals to double financial assistance. Cyprus’s foreign minister, Constantinos Kombos, whose country holds the EU’s rotating presidency, stressed the need for dialogue rather than isolation, arguing that engagement remains essential even with a difficult partner.
Yet behind the diplomatic language, many European officials privately acknowledge that the Greenland crisis represents a turning point. It has exposed the limits of accommodation and raised uncomfortable questions about Europe’s ability to defend its own sovereignty. Whether Europe can balance its reliance on the US with a firmer assertion of its interests remains uncertain. What is clear is that Greenland has become more than an Arctic territory; it is now a test of Europe’s political maturity and its willingness to draw a line when core principles are at stake.



























































































