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Speaking to reporters on the second day of the NATO summit in Turkey’s capital Ankara, Denmark’s Frederiksen underscored the message that Greenland is not for sale.
Her comments come shortly after the U.S. president renewed his threat to seek to acquire the self-governing Danish territory, suggesting that the U.S. could pull its troops out of Europe in response to the region’s continued pushback on the issue.
“Our position is clear as it has been all through. Greenland is, of course, not for sale,” Frederiksen said. “We hope that all, including all allies, will respect the Greenlandic people’s right for self-determination and we are a sovereign state, and we need everybody to respect our territorial integrity and our sovereignty.”
She added: “One of the reasons why we have built NATO many, many years ago is if anything happens to one of us, then everybody should stand up for each other.”
In a bilateral meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday, Trump said Europe’s refusal to go along with his expansionist desire is “what hurt my relationship with NATO.”
Greenland “should be controlled by the United States, not by Denmark,” Trump said. “And when they wouldn’t go along with it, and with all the money we spend to help them with Russia ā we don’t have to spend any money.”
The U.S. president also suggested that the country could remove “all of our soldiers out of Europe,” before adding: “Because as you probably noticed, Europe’s a very different place than it was 20 years ago.”
Trump ‘absolutlely has a point’ on Greenland issue
Trump’s pursuit of Greenland became a major trans-Atlantic issue at the start of the year, sparked by the president’s repeated claims that the U.S. needed to acquire the island. Greenlandic lawmakers have insisted the island is not for sale.
Trump, who had refused to rule out the use of military force to annex Greenland, abruptly announcedĀ in late January, however, that he and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte had formed a “framework of a future deal” with respect to the territory.
A working group of representatives from the U.S., Denmark and Greenland have since been meeting to discuss next steps.
Rutte said Wednesday that Trump “absolutely has a point” on preventing China and Russia from gaining access to the Arctic, referring to the U.S. president’s claim that Greenland is “surrounded” by Chinese and Russian ships.
“So, it is crucial that, as an alliance, and this is what we agreed in Davos, work together to make sure that doesn’t happen, and also, when it comes to Denmark and Greenland itself, we have a good process in place,” Rutte said.