From Nigel Farage to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, EU politicians are competing for the privilege of being Europe’s Trump whisperer.
The European Union gives "full support" to Denmark against Donald Trump's threat to take control of Greenland and stands ready to defend the principles of national
The EU and Nato have taken a vow of silence over Greenland after Denmark requested its key allies refrain from reacting to Donald Trump’s threats to seize the Arctic island. Copenhagen’s strategy of avoiding public confrontation with Trump,
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot says Paris is in talks with Copenhagen about sending troops to Greenland. Donald Trump would not take kindly to such a move.
Donald Trump's repeated threat to take control of Greenland one way or another has aroused a sense of alarm across Europe. View on euronews
Denmark has requested that confrontational reactions to US President Trumps aggressive overtures be avoided according to the newspaper D
The European Commission has announced its intention to defend the EU's interests if the new U.S. President, Donald Trump, imposes the previously announced tariffs on the EU. "The agreement will make it easier to invest in each other's markets,
In my opinion, it would make sense not only to deploy American forces in Greenland but also to consider the possibility of stationing EU soldiers there,” Brieger said. According to him, this would send a strong signal and contribute to stability in the region.
Sources close to Donald Trump claim he shared a 'tense' conversation with the Prime Minster of Greenland, leading the military body of the EU to claim a united army in the country might be valuable
Frederiksen will meet German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Berlin, French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte in Brussels, during a whirlwind day of international diplomacy as Trump threatens to upend the polar security architecture.
BRUSSELS — For years, Germany and its austerity-loving allies were Europe’s fiscal buzzkills. Their motto was simple: No joint debt, no budgetary free-for-alls and absolutely no blank checks for Brussels.