PARIS/OSLO, Jan 19 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump has linked his drive to take control of Greenland
to his failure to win the Nobel Peace Prize, saying he no longer
thought "purely of Peace" as the row over the island threatened to
reignite a trade war with Europe.
Asked
by NBC News in a brief telephone interview on Monday if he would use
force to seize Greenland, Trump said “No comment,” adding he would
"100%" follow through on plans to hit European nations with tariffs
without a Greenland deal.
Trump
has intensified his push to wrest sovereignty over Greenland from
fellow NATO member Denmark, prompting the European Union to weigh hitting back with its own measures.
The
dispute is threatening to upend the NATO alliance that has underpinned
Western security for decades and which was already under strain over the
war in Ukraine and Trump's refusal to protect allies which do not spend
enough on defence.
Trump's threat has rattled European industry
and sent shockwaves through financial markets amid fears of a return to
the volatility of 2025's trade war, which only eased when the sides
reached tariff deals in the middle of the year.
In
a text message on Sunday to Norway's Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere,
Trump said: "Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel
Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an
obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be
predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the
United States of America."
Norway's government released the messages on Monday under the country's freedom of information act.
Stoere
had sent an initial message on behalf of himself and Finnish President
Alexander Stubb, calling for de-escalation of tensions and suggesting a
call, eliciting a response from Trump less than half an hour later.
NOBEL COMMITTEE GAVE 2025 PEACE PRIZE TO MACHADO, NOT TRUMP
The
Norwegian Nobel Committee annoyed Trump by awarding the 2025 Nobel
Peace Prize not to him but to Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina
Machado.
In his message, Trump also repeated his accusation that Denmark cannot protect Greenland from Russia or China.
"...
And why do they have a 'right of ownership' anyway?" he wrote, adding:
"The World is not secure unless we have Complete and Total Control of
Greenland.”
Trump
vowed on Saturday to implement a wave of increasing tariffs from
February 1 on EU members Denmark, Sweden, France, Germany, the
Netherlands and Finland, along with Britain and Norway, until the U.S.
is allowed to buy Greenland, home to only 57,000 people.
"We
are living in 2026, you can trade with people, but you don't trade
people," Denmark's Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said during a
visit to London on Monday.
In
a post on Facebook, Greenland Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said
the territory should be allowed to decide its own fate.
"We will not let ourselves be pressured. We stand firm on dialogue, on respect and on international law," he said.
Denmark's
military told Reuters that planes carrying Danish soldiers and Army
Commander Peter Boysen would land in Kangerlussuaq, western Greenland,
on Monday, describing it as a "substantial contribution" to the Arctic
Endurance military exercise.
TALKS WITH TRUMP IN DAVOS?
Norway's
Stoere amended his schedule, announcing that he would attend the World
Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday and Thursday, overlapping with
Trump's planned appearance at the annual gathering of the global
political and business elite.
Trump is expected to deliver a keynote address on Wednesday in his first appearance at the conference in six years.
German
Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he too would try to meet Trump on
Wednesday, adding that a trade dispute was not wanted. "But if we are
confronted with tariffs that we consider unreasonable, then we are
capable of responding," Merz said.U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
said it would be "very unwise" for European governments to retaliate.
"I
think it’s a complete canard that the president will be doing this
because of the Nobel prize. The president is looking at Greenland as a
strategic asset for the United States," he told reporters in Davos.
EU LEADERS TO MEET ON THURSDAY
EU
leaders will discuss their options at an emergency summit in Brussels
on Thursday. One option is a package of tariffs on 93 billion euros
($108 billion) of U.S. imports that could automatically kick in on
February 6 after a six-month suspension.
Another option is the "Anti-Coercion Instrument" (ACI),
which has never yet been used and which could limit access to public
tenders, investments or banking activity or restrict trade in services,
in which the U.S. has a surplus with the bloc, including in digital
services.
The EU said it was continuing to engage "at all levels" with the U.S. but said the use of its ACI was not off the table.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer called for calm discussion between the allies, adding that he did not believe Trump was considering military action to seize Greenland.
Russia
declined to comment on whether the U.S. designs on Greenland were good
or bad but said it was hard to disagree with experts that Trump would "go down in... world history" if he did take control of the island.($1 = 0.8604 euros)
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