Transition
Live Updates: Trump Suggests U.S. Territorial Expansion and Airs Grievances
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/01/07/us/trump-news
Here’s
what to know
In an
hourlong news conference at Mar-a-Lago, President-elect Donald J. Trump refused
to rule out using military force to retake the Panama Canal, which was returned
by treaty decades ago, and acquire Greenland, which Mr. Trump said was
necessary for U.S. national security. Read more ›
Mr. Trump
refused to say whether he would pardon Jan. 6 rioters, and instead pivoted to
criticism of the F.B.I. In his opening comments, he announced a
multibillion-dollar plan to build data centers in multiple states bankrolled by
investors from Dubai. He then repeatedly attacked President Biden and other
foes.
The federal
judge who handled President-elect Donald J. Trump’s classified documents case,
Aileen M. Cannon, temporarily barred the special counsel, Jack Smith, from
releasing his final report on the investigation to the public. Read more ›
Michael D.
Shear
Updated
Jan. 7,
2025, 2:00 p.m. ET11 minutes ago
Michael D.
ShearWhite House correspondent
Trump
raises the possibility of using military or economic force to take Greenland
and the Panama Canal.
President-elect
Donald J. Trump said Tuesday that he would not rule out the use of military or
economic coercion to force Panama to give up control of the canal America built
more than a century ago and to force Denmark to sell Greenland to the United States.
In a
rambling, hourlong news conference, Mr. Trump also reiterated his threat that
“all hell will break out in the Middle East” if the hostages being held by
Hamas are not released by Inauguration Day, repeating the threat four times.
“If they’re
not back by the time I get into office, all hell will break out in the Middle
East,” he told reporters. “And it will not be good for Hamas, and it will not
be good, frankly, for anyone. All hell will break out. I don’t have to say
anymore, but that’s what it is.”
Mr. Trump
did not elaborate during the news conference, where he delivered a hodgepodge
of grievances, complaints and false claims, from the Afghanistan withdrawal of
2021 to offshore drilling to the criminal cases against him and the size of his
electoral victory.
He refused
to rule out using military force to retake the Panama Canal, which was given
back to Panama by treaty in the late 1990s, and acquire Greenland, which Mr.
Trump said was necessary for the national security of the United States.
“It might be
that you’ll have to do something,” he said.
Trump’s
desire to expand the U.S. footprint is entirely in keeping with his mind-set of
making whatever he controls as big as possible, going back to his series of
acquisitions in the late 1980s. In recent days, Mr. Trump has talked repeatedly
about buying Greenland and taking over the Panama Canal.
It was not
clear how serious the president-elect was about some of his comments during the
news conference. At one point, he suggested that his administration will rename
the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America.
The news
conference was a back-to-the-future moment for Mr. Trump, who often used
similar appearances as president to seize control of the public narrative with
attacks on his adversaries and bombastic and often false assertions about his
accomplishments.
In an
appearance in front of reporters that had been described as an economic
development announcement, Mr. Trump lashed out at President Biden for banning
oil drilling in some waters, said the special counsel who investigated him is
“deranged” and assailed the New York judge overseeing a criminal case against
him.
“That’s a
sick group of people, and it was all to influence the election,” Mr. Trump
said. “It was all a fight against their political opponent. We’ve never had
that in this country. We have had that in certain countries. We’ve had that in
third-tier countries.”
Before
taking questions, Mr. Trump talked for more than a half-hour without focusing
on any single topic. He ranted about Mr. Biden’s focus on electric cars, saying
“I don’t know what it is with electric. This guy loves electric.” And he
complained about shower heads with restricted water flow.
“It’s called
rain, comes down from comes down from heaven. And they want to do, no water
comes out of the shower,” he said. “It goes drip, drip, drip. So what happens
you’re in the shower 10 times as long, you know. No water comes out of the
faucet.”
He also
returned to one of his favorite targets: his hatred of windmills.
“The
windmills are driving the whales crazy,” he said.
The
president-elect talked at length about foreign policy, criticizing Mr. Biden’s
handling of the war in Ukraine, the Afghanistan pullout, and the conflict in
Israel. He also repeated his threat not to protect NATO allies, a foundational
part of the pact, if they did not increase the amount of money they spend on
defense of their own countries.
At one
point, he appeared to confirm a recent story in the Financial Times suggesting
that he wants NATO countries to commit to spending up to 5 percent of their
economic output on defense, a significant increase.
He also
criticized Canada, saying that the country should be a state in the United
States because of the economic support that the United States provides to the
country. He said he would not use military power to achieve that but said that
he would use economic power to pressure the American neighbor.
“Why are we
supporting a country, 200 million plus a year?” he told reporters. “Our
military is at their disposal all of these other things. They should be a
state. That’s what I told Trudeau when he came down.”
Mr. Trump
threatened to use “economic force” to join Canada and the United States
together, implying that the United States would pare back its purchases of
Canadian products.
He also said
he would “tariff Denmark at a very high level” if it does not give Greenland to
the United States.
During the
news conference, Mr. Trump was told that a federal judge had blocked Jack
Smith, the special counsel who had been investigating his actions on Jan. 6 and
his handling of classified documents, from releasing a report about the
investigations.
“So if
they’re not allowed to issue the report, that’s the way it should be,” he said.
“Why should he be allowed to write a fake report? It’ll only be a fake report.
That’s great news.”
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