Denmark, Greenland and Trump
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Newsweek |
Nielsen, who was sworn in as Greenland's prime minister last week, issued a strong rebuke to Trump's ambitions in a Facebook post. "Let me make this clear: The U.S. is not getting [Greenland]. We don...
Yahoo |
The United States will not take over Greenland, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said after arriving on Wednesday for a three-day visit to the semi-autonomous Danish island.
Yahoo |
"Yes, but the USA shall not take over Greenland. Greenland belongs to the Greenlanders, and the USA shall not take over Greenland, and that is of course also the message that we will be saying togeth...
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Danish shipping powerhouse A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S purchased a railway linking ports at both ends of the Panama Canal, undermining the US’s presence along a key trade route where Donald Trump is trying to elbow out competitors.
Denmark's King Frederik and Queen Mary, accompanied by French President Emmanuel Macron and First Lady Brigitte Macron, visited Notre-Dame Cathedral on the last day of their state visit to France Wednesday.
The battle over Greenland is set to intensify this week as Denmark's prime minister visits the Arctic island days after U.S. Vice President JD Vance.
A Danish official called for the European Union (EU) to mount a united response to President Donald Trump's instruction that foreign companies with American contracts should comply with his orders against diversity,
Meeting between Marco Rubio and Lars Løkke Rasmussen is latest diplomatic activity centred on control of Greenland
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Trump has dreams of Greenland. But the semiautonomous territory of Denmark wants no part of it.
President Emmanuel Macron of France and Brigitte Macron played hosts to King Frederik X of Denmark and Queen Mary of Denmark on Monday in Paris. France’s first couple greeted the Danish royals at the Élysée presidential palace for King Frederik and Queen Mary’s official visit, focusing on renewable energy, healthcare, defense and culture.
A statement released by the National Museum of Denmark suggests that the iconic Sutton Hoo helmet may have its origins in Denmark, and not Sweden, as previously thought. In 1939, the iron- and copper-clad helmet was discovered in Suffolk,