EU responds to Trump threat to absorb Greenland
The European Commission has said that it is unlikely that US President-elect Donald Trump will follow through on his idea to send American troops to take over Greenland, an autonomous territory affiliated with Denmark, once he is back in the White House. However, Brussels stressed that the sovereignty of EU member-states must be respected.
During a press-conference on Tuesday, Trump refused to rule out the possibility of using military force to bring Greenland and the Panama Canal under Washington's control. “It might be that you will have to do something… We need Greenland for national security purposes,” he said.
Later in the day, the European Commission’s chief spokesperson, Paula Pinho, described the US President-elect’s comments as “highly speculative.”
“There are many threats that do not materialize, and at this stage, we do not believe it is necessary to go beyond this,” she said.
Pinho confirmed that an attack on Greenland would activate the EU’s mutual defense assistance clause under Article 42(7) of the bloc’s treaty, but stressed that “we are discussing a highly theoretical issue.”
European Commission foreign affairs spokeperson Anitta Hipper said on Tuesday that she “will not go into the specifics” regarding Trump’s threat.
“It is clear that the sovereignty of states has to be respected,” she noted, adding that this fully applies to Denmark.
Hipper also said that Brussels was looking forward to working towards “a stronger transatlantic agenda and common goals and issues of key strategic interest” with the upcoming US administration.
In recent weeks, Trump has renewed his interest in Greenland, which he had offered to buy from Denmark during his first presidential term. Copenhagen’s response to his aspirations has always been that the world’s largest island, which is rich in gold and uranium and is believed to have vast oil reserves in its territorial waters, is not for sale.
In the same press-conference on Tuesday, the US President-elect argued that “people really do not even know if Denmark has any legal right to it, but if they do, they should give it up because we need it.”
Earlier this week, Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., flew to Greenland and spent several hours in the territory’s capital, Nuuk. “We are going to treat you well” was his message to the island’s population of some 57,000. Trump Jr. was accompanied by several aides and a documentary film crew on the trip.