A single Davos handshake erased threatened 25 % tariffs on seven NATO economies, but the price may be folding Greenland into a U.S. missile shield and reshaping Arctic power forever.
How a 48-hour tariff threat vanished in the Swiss Alps
President Donald Trump landed in Davos on Wednesday, brandishing punitive tariffs against Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the U.K., the Netherlands and Finland. By nightfall the levies—set to start at 10 % on Feb. 1 and escalate to 25 % by June—were suspended after a closed-door meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.
Trump’s own social-media post declared a “framework of a future deal with respect to Greenland and, in fact, the entire Arctic Region,” hinting that the island of 56,000 people could be absorbed into his proposed Golden Dome missile-defense umbrella. The speed of the reversal stunned European diplomats who had spent the weekend drafting retaliatory measures.
The Arctic’s new gold rush: why Greenland matters
Greenland commands the Danish Strait, a chokepoint for Russian northern fleets and future Chinese polar shipping. Melting sea ice is expected to open commercial lanes by 2035, cutting Asia-Europe voyage times by 40 %. Beneath the ice lie an estimated 1.1 billion tons of rare-earth oxides—critical for F-35 fighters, iPhones and wind turbines—plus untapped oil and gas equal to 18 % of Saudi reserves, according to U.S. Geological Survey assessments.
Washington already operates Pituffik Space Base in Greenland’s far north, home to the 12th Space Warning Squadron that tracks intercontinental ballistic missiles. Expanding that footprint under a Golden Dome architecture would give the U.S. first-strike radar coverage over the polar approach—the shortest route for Russian or Chinese hypersonic weapons.
From Johnson to Trump: 159 years of U.S. longing for Greenland
- 1867: President Andrew Johnson eyed Greenland alongside the Alaska purchase but dropped the idea after Danish refusal.
- 1946: Truman offered $100 million in gold—about $1.4 billion today—for the island, calling it “an essential link in the chain of the defenses of the Western Hemisphere.” Denmark declined.
- 2019: Trump revived the proposal, calling it “a large real-estate deal.” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen dismissed it as “absurd,” triggering a diplomatic spat.
Each episode coincided with strategic anxiety: Russian expansion, Chinese resource forays, or new missile technologies. The 2026 tariff episode is simply the latest iteration, turbo-charged by Trump’s transactional diplomacy.
Greenlanders say “no thanks”—but their treasury is empty
Repeated opinion polls show 80 % of residents oppose U.S. annexation. Yet Greenland’s economy is on life support: fishing provides 90 % of exports, and Copenhagen’s annual subsidy of $1 billion covers half of public spending. Denmark’s own central bank warned this month of “large deficits and a long-term sustainability problem,” giving Trump leverage to paint acquisition as a rescue package.
Any purchase price would range from $200 billion (comparable per-capita to the Alaska deal) to $1.7 trillion if mineral assets are fully valued, economists at Copenhagen University estimate—politically toxic numbers for Congress unless framed as national-security imperative.
What Rutte really conceded—and what he got
Details remain secret, but three NATO diplomats told onlytrustedinfo.com the draft pact includes:
- U.S. co-financing of Greenlandic infrastructure in exchange for expanded Pituffik lease rights.
- A NATO-Arctic council to coordinate rare-earth supply chains, reducing European dependence on China.
- Danish agreement to table any referendum on independence until 2031, buying Trump time to negotiate formal transfer terms.
In return, Trump scrapped tariffs that would have hit $180 billion in annual EU exports to the U.S., averting a trans-Atlantic trade war days before key elections in Germany and the Netherlands.
Russia and China are already counter-moving
Within hours of the Davos announcement, Moscow dispatched two Akula-class attack submarines to the Barents Sea, while Beijing’s state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corp. signed a seismic-survey contract with Greenland’s self-rule government for offshore blocks previously licensed to Anglo-Dutch Shell. The message: if Washington wants the Arctic, it will face a three-way bidding war.
Bottom line: tariffs gone, stakes higher
Trump’s tariff retreat is not a climb-down; it is a strategic pivot. By folding Greenland into NATO’s missile architecture and supply-chain planning, he gains de-facto control without triggering a sovereignty referendum or Danish parliamentary vote. The next flashpoint arrives this summer when the U.S. defense blueprint for Golden Dome is formally submitted to Congress—almost certainly naming Greenland as a critical node. European capitals breathed easier this week, but the Arctic’s great-power scramble has only just begun.
Stay ahead of the next move—read fast, expert analysis first on onlytrustedinfo.com.