Trump’s Davos ultimatum—hand over Greenland or face 10 % tariffs—has triggered mass protests, a NATO rupture and the fastest militarization of the Arctic since the 1960s.
The Davos Ultimatum: “All We’re Asking for Is Greenland”
Speaking to the World Economic Forum on Jan. 21, 2026, President Donald Trump abandoned diplomatic nuance and made the most explicit seizure pitch of his presidency. USA TODAY captured the moment: “All the United States is asking for is a place called Greenland… including the right title and ownership because you need the ownership to defend it.”
The remark landed hours after Trump confirmed he would impose a 10 % tariff on all exports from eight NATO countries—a list that includes Denmark—unless Copenhagen begins formal transfer talks. European diplomats immediately labeled the move “economic blackmail,” the sharpest fracture inside the alliance since the 2003 Iraq split.
Why Trump Won’t Let the Arctic Go
Trump’s logic is three-fold:
- Mineral jackpot: Greenland holds the world’s largest undeveloped deposits of rare-earth oxides—critical for F-35 fighters, EV batteries and quantum chips.
- Arctic shipping lanes: Melting ice is opening the Transpolar Sea Route, shaving 4,000 nautical miles off Asia-Europe voyages.
- Missile geometry: Thule Air Base already gives the U.S. first-warning radar coverage for incoming ICBMs. Full sovereignty would allow deeper missile-defense silos and hypersonic-tracker arrays.
“The U.S. is the only country that can defend Greenland from Russia and China,” Trump declared, citing classified Pentagon briefings that warn both rivals have stepped up dual-use research stations within 500 miles of the island.
Greenland’s Reply: “We Are Not for Sale”
On Jan. 17, roughly 5,000 people—one-third of Nuuk’s population—marched on the U.S. consulate. Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen marched at the front, chanting in Greenlandic, “Inuit Nunaat, inuit naalaga” (“Greenland belongs to Greenlanders”).
Hours later the Greenlandic Parliament passed a unanimous resolution ruling out any sale, while Copenhagen announced a €2.4 billion Arctic defense package—quadrupling its Greenland garrison and fast-tracking two new icebreakers. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte emerged from a Davos sidebar to confirm the alliance “does not recognize real-estate transactions as collective-defense triggers,” a direct warning that U.S. coercion could forfeit Article 5 guarantees.
Tariff Leverage: How the 10 % Threat Would Work
White House aides circulated a 19-page dossier to EU delegations detailing how, under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, Trump could slap 10 % duties on Danish, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Polish, Dutch, Belgian and Italian goods—$178 billion in annual trade—until “Greenland sovereignty is transferred to the United States.”
Eurozone finance ministers calculate the move would push the bloc into technical recession within two quarters and send the krone-euro peg into free fall. Danish central bank governor Christian Kettel warned the knock-on effect could “eclipse the 1992 ERM crisis.”
The Historical Ghost: 1946, 2019, 2026
This is not the first U.S. bid. In 1946 President Truman offered Denmark $100 million in gold for Greenland—about $1.4 billion today—to counter Soviet Arctic bases. Denmark refused. Trump revived the idea in 2019, calling it “a large real estate deal,” but dropped it after global ridicule. The 2026 version is backed by tariff cannons, naval task forces and rare-earth supply-chain panic—making it the most credible seizure attempt since the Louisiana Purchase.
What Happens Next: Three Flashpoints
- June 2026 NATO summit in The Hague: Denmark will demand an alliance statement that territorial coercion voids Article 5. Washington is lobbying to strip that language.
- Greenlandic independence referendum (tabled for fall 2026): If Greenlanders vote “yes,” Copenhagen could transfer sovereignty to Nuuk—putting a non-NATO micro-state next to Thule’s nuclear radar.
- Arctic Council meeting in May: Russia and China are expected to propose a “neutral Arctic” resolution—inviting Greenland to ban all foreign bases, effectively evicting U.S. forces without firing a shot.
Bottom Line
Trump has fused trade war, security blackmail and resource grab into a single Arctic gambit. The island of 57,000 people now sits at the epicenter of a 21st-century great-power scramble that could redraw NATO maps and redefine what counts as an act of alliance solidarity. Europe is drawing a red line in the ice; Washington is testing how hard it can press before the Atlantic cracks.
Stay locked to onlytrustedinfo.com for minute-by-minute briefings as the Greenland crisis decides the future of the Arctic—and the Western alliance.