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Trump Slaps 10% Tariff on 8 NATO Allies Over Greenland Standoff, Risks Alliance Fracture

Last updated: January 17, 2026 12:21 pm
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Trump Slaps 10% Tariff on 8 NATO Allies Over Greenland Standoff, Risks Alliance Fracture
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In a single Saturday morning, Donald Trump turned a real-estate fantasy into a trans-Atlantic earthquake, levying 10 % tariffs on eight of America’s closest allies and daring them to choose between their wallets and their sovereignty.

The Tariff Ultimatum

Starting Feb. 1, every container of Danish dairy, German cars, Swedish steel, French wine, Dutch electronics, Finnish paper, British pharmaceuticals and Norwegian salmon will cost 10 % more the moment it enters a U.S. port. If Copenhagen and its partners refuse to “facilitate the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland” by June 1, the rate jumps to 25 %, Trump announced on Truth Social.

The edict names Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Finland—all founding or core NATO members—signaling that Washington now views economic coercion as an acceptable tool inside the 76-year-old alliance. European diplomats, caught off guard during weekend talks, privately warn the move could trigger immediate retaliatory duties on Boeing aircraft, Iowa corn and Texas liquefied-natural-gas exports.

Greenland’s Cold Rejection

Hours before Trump’s post, thousands of Greenlanders and Danes marched through Nuuk and Copenhagen chanting “Hands Off” and “We shape our future.” Their message: the island’s 57,000 residents have no intention of becoming the 51st state. Banners reading “Make America Smart Again” mirrored polls showing 85 % opposition to U.S. annexation, according to Associated Press data.

Senator Chris Coons leads bipartisan U.S. delegation in Copenhagen trying to calm Danish and Greenlandic anger over Trump’s annexation push
Senator Chris Coons from the Democratic Party speaks during a press conference with the American delegation, consisting of senators and members of the House of Representatives, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026. (Ida Marie Odgaard/Ritzau Scanpix via AP)

Congress Tries Damage Control

Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., landed in Copenhagen with a bipartisan House-Senate group aiming to “de-escalate” the crisis. “I hope the Kingdom of Denmark does not abandon faith in the American people,” he said, stressing decades of NATO cooperation. Yet even Coons admitted “current rhetoric around Greenland” is eroding trust faster than any Russian disinformation campaign.

Arctic Brinkmanship

On the same morning Trump tweeted tariffs, Danish Maj. Gen. Søren Andersen stood on the deck of HDMS Knud Rasmussen in Nuuk and confirmed NATO drills will continue with U.S. participation this week. Asked whether Danish forces would fire on American troops if they tried to seize the island, Andersen cited Cold-War-era rules of engagement: “A Danish soldier, if attacked, has the obligation to fight back.”

Danish Major General Søren Andersen on NATO vessel in Nuuk as Operation Arctic Endurance begins amid Trump takeover threats
A patch of the Joint Arctic Command is seen on a jacket of Major General Søren Andersen standing onboard a military vessel HDMS Knud Rasmussen of the Royal Danish Navy docked in Nuuk, Greenland, on Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

Legal Quick-Sand

Trade attorneys note Trump could invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the same statute behind earlier China and Mexico tariffs now under Supreme Court review. A 10 % levy on $200 billion in annual European exports would rank among the largest unilateral trade penalties in U.S. history, exceeding even his 2018 steel duties. EU officials promise an immediate WTO complaint and coordinated counter-tariffs within 60 days.

Markets Stagger

Futures on the DAX and CAC 40 slid 2.3 % in after-hours trading, while the Danish krone hit a six-month low versus the dollar. Analysts at Goldman Sachs estimate a full 25 % tariff could shave 0.4 % off euro-zone GDP within a year, pushing ECB rate cuts deeper into negative territory.

Mineral Jackpot vs. Moral Hazard

Trump argues Greenland is critical for the “Golden Dome” missile shield and holds rare-earth oxides vital to U.S. defense contractors. Yet Denmark points out no Chinese or Russian warships have been spotted off the coast this winter, undermining the security pretext. Meanwhile, a joint working group launched by Vice President JD Vance and Danish diplomats already offers Washington expanded base access—without raising flags over Nuuk.

What Happens Next

  • Feb. 1: U.S. Customs begins collecting 10 % duties on targeted European goods.
  • Mid-February: EU publishes retaliation list; Airbus, Levi’s and Florida orange-juice exporters brace.
  • March: Greenland’s parliament debates a referendum on independence from Denmark, a vote that could formally close the door to U.S. purchase.
  • June 1: Tariffs leap to 25 % unless Trump declares Greenland negotiations “successful.”

The standoff has already shattered the post-1949 assumption that NATO lines are inviolable. If tariffs hold, Europe will accelerate plans for defense-industrial autonomy and a sovereign-wealth fund to counter U.S. economic leverage—moves that could redraw the Atlantic alliance faster than any Kremlin plot.

For investors, shoppers and soldiers alike, the message is stark: in 2026, trade is war by other means, and Greenland is the first battlefield.

Stay ahead of every twist—bookmark onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative analysis on tariffs, NATO and the Arctic crisis as it unfolds.

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