They stared in disbelief as he demanded to “own” Greenland.
Within minutes, Trump had insulted allies, threatened Europe’s economy, and hinted at “excessive strength and force.”
Markets dipped, leaders fumed, and NATO’s unity was dragged into question.
By the time he called windmill buyers “stupid people”, even his supporters looked unea… Continues…
Trump’s Davos appearance became less a policy speech and more a geopolitical showdown. Arriving late after Air Force One’s emergency U‑turn, he tore into Europe’s “seriously weakened” leaders, questioned NATO’s reliability, and bizarrely linked a
US stock market dip to Iceland. Then came Greenland: an “obligation” for America to control, a “golden dome” he said the US must build, insisting only Washington could truly defend the Arctic island.
European leaders pushed back hard. Macron framed the moment as a choice between “respect” and “bullies,” while Belgium’s prime minister likened Trump to the “Very Hungry Caterpillar,” devouring trust and alliances. Tariff threats – 10%, then 25% – now hang over Europe’s economies like a sword,
explicitly tied to Denmark’s refusal to sell territory. In a single speech, Trump turned Davos from a forum on cooperation into a live test of how far he’s willing to go to get what he wants.