Trump
threatens 25% tariff on European allies until Denmark sells Greenland to US
Heads of
state across Europe respond in solidarity with Denmark and Greenland, and
boycott of World Cup suggested
Adam
Gabbatt, Robert Mackey and Callum Jones
Sat 17
Jan 2026 22.17 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/17/trump-tariff-european-countries-greenland
Donald
Trump threatened a 25% tariff on a slew of European countries including
Denmark, Germany, France and the UK – until the US is allowed to purchase
Greenland, in an extraordinary escalation of the president’s bid to claim the
autonomous Danish territory.
In a
lengthy post on Saturday on Truth Social, Trump said he would impose a 10%
tariff on Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the
Netherlands and Finland beginning 1 February, “on any and all goods sent to the
United States of America”.
He said
the tariff will increase to 25% on 1 June.
“This
Tariff will be due and payable until such time as a Deal is reached for the
Complete and Total purchase of Greenland,” Trump said.
The
president’s longstanding interest in acquiring Greenland “one way or the other”
has become a fixation since the US raid that captured Venezuelan president
Nicolás Maduro earlier in January. While he has claimed the Arctic territory’s
current status poses a national security threat to the US, this has been
disputed by US allies, including Denmark.
In the
Saturday morning post, Trump said Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the
UK, the Netherlands and Finland “have journeyed to Greenland, for purposes
unknown”. It was an apparent reference to Nato allies deploying troops in
Greenland on Thursday in response to Trump’s threats to forcefully take the
Arctic island, which is an autonomous territory of Denmark.
Trump
suggested, incorrectly, that residents of Greenland “currently have two
dogsleds as protection” – and claimed “China and Russia want Greenland” to the
detriment of the US. “Nobody will touch this sacred piece of land, especially
since the national security of the United States, and the world at large, is at
stake,” Trump wrote.
“The
President’s statement comes as a surprise,” Lars Løkke Rasmussen, Denmark’s
foreign minister, responded on social media. “Earlier this week, we had a
constructive meeting with Vice President Vance and Secretary Rubio. The purpose
of the increased military presence in Greenland, to which the President refers,
is to enhance security in the Arctic.”
“Every
insult, threat, tariff and lie that we receive strengthens our resolve,” Rasmus
Jarlov, the conservative chair of Denmark’s defence committee, wrote in more
direct language. “The answer from Denmark and Greenland is final: We will never
hand over Greenland. We pray that our true allies will stand with us because we
are going to need it.”
The
tariff threat against Nato allies united the leaders of those nations in
unusually blunt language, after months of treading carefully for fear of
triggering the volatile US president’s rage.
In
response to Trump’s comments on Saturday, the EU commission president, Ursula
von der Leyen, said in a statement that the Europeans “have consistently
underlined our shared transatlantic interest in peace and security in the
Arctic, including through NATO. The pre-coordinated Danish exercise, conducted
with allies, responds to the need to strengthen Arctic security and poses no
threat to anyone.”
“The EU
stands in full solidarity with Denmark and the people of Greenland,” she added.
“Tariffs would undermine transatlantic relations and risk a dangerous downward
spiral.”
“Our
position on Greenland is very clear – it is part of the Kingdom of Denmark and
its future is a matter for the Greenlanders and the Danes,” the UK prime
minister, Keir Starmer, said. “We have also made clear that Arctic security
matters for the whole of Nato and allies should all do more together to address
the threat from Russia across different parts of the Arctic. Applying tariffs
on allies for pursuing the collective security of Nato allies is completely
wrong. We will of course be pursuing this directly with the US administration.”
Emmanuel
Macron, the French president, drew an implicit comparison between Trump’s
threats to seize Greenland and Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. “No
intimidation or threat will influence us – neither in Ukraine, nor in
Greenland, nor anywhere else in the world when we are confronted with such
situations,” Macron wrote in a social media riposte to Trump. “Tariff threats
are unacceptable and have no place in this context. Europeans will respond in a
united and coordinated manner should they be confirmed. We will ensure that
European sovereignty is upheld.”
Finland’s
president, Alexander Stubb, whose excellence at golf previously made him
something of a Trump whisperer, echoed the warning about a potential “downward
spiral”.
“We will
not let ourselves be blackmailed,” the Swedish prime minister, Ulf Kristersson,
added. That sentiment was echoed by Norway’s prime minister, Jonas Gahr Støre,
who wrote: “Threats have no place among allies.”
Germany’s
leadership was more reserved, with the German chancellor Friedrich Merz leaving
it to his spokesperson, Stefan Kornelius, to say only that the government “has
taken note of” Trump’s statements and plans to coordinate with allies to
“decide on appropriate responses at the appropriate time”.
On
Friday, however, a spokesperson on foreign policy for the chancellor’s
Christian Democrat party, Jürgen Hardt, suggested that Germany could threaten
to boycott the World Cup Trump is hosting this summer “as a last resort in
order to get Trump to see sense on the Greenland issue”. Polling done before
Trump’s latest threat for the popular German tabloid Bild revealed broad
support for a World Cup boycott, with 47% of Germans in favor and just 35%
against, should the US annex Greenland.
Even
before the new tariff threat, there were mass protests in Greenland and Denmark
on Saturday against Trump’s efforts to “acquire” the island.
His
latest tariff threat comes just eight months after Trump announced that he had
struck a trade pact with the UK – and six months after he announced a pact with
the European Union.
The UK
would have protection against future US tariffs “because I like them”, Trump
declared in the summer. He described the pact with the EU as a “powerful deal”
and an “important” partnership.
The
president has repeatedly turned to tariffs in a bid to force countries to bend
to his will – with some success. Days after returning to office for his second
term in early 2025, Colombia agreed to accept military aircraft carrying
deported migrants after Trump threatened steep duties on the country’s exports
to the US.
Trump,
who has previously extolled the benefits of tariffs as a negotiating tool,
stressed on Saturday that the US was “immediately open to negotiation” with
Denmark and any of the countries it was threatening to hit with these new
tariffs.
His
aggressive global trade strategy has raised fears for the US economy, which
analysts and policymakers have warned could face significant damage from
sweeping tariffs on the world.
While the
White House has played down such concerns, a vast wave of tariffs unveiled by
Trump last spring – when he proclaimed the start of a new era for the US
economy – was quickly reversed as global markets fell sharply.
But his
administration’s erratic rollout of other tariffs nevertheless significantly
strained US trade ties with the world. Americans now face an overall average
effective tariff rate of 16.8%, according to the Budget Lab at Yale, the
highest level since 1935.
The
Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, said recently that Greenland’s
defence is a “common concern” for the whole of Nato. The Guardian reported that
European troops had deployed to Greenland, in part, to establish what a more
sustained ground deployment on the territory could look like, and partly to
reassure the US that European Nato members were serious about Arctic security.
Fewer
than one in five of Americans approve of Trump’s efforts to acquire Greenland,
a poll published on Thursday by Reuters/Ipsos found. Both Democrats and
Republicans oppose the effort, and only 4% of Americans think the US should
take Greenland using military force.
Much of
Trump’s wider trade strategy is currently in the hands of the US supreme court,
which is mulling whether the imposition of many of his tariffs was legal. A
decision could be announced as early as next week.

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