Chairman and Chief Editor
Bedour Ibrahim
عاجل
madinet masr
English

Trump has said the U.S. needs Greenland for national security reasons

U.S. threats of a Greenland takeover spark talk of trade wars

Fri, Jan. 16, 2026
Greenland
Greenland

A U.S. move to seize Greenland could damage trade ties with the European Union, France’s finance minister has warned, as one analyst told CNBC that tariffs or economic sanctions could lead to a “trade war.”

U.S. President Donald Trump has ramped up talk of annexing Greenland this month — and has not ruled out taking it by force. Talks between the U.S., Denmark and Greenland on Wednesday over the future of the world’s largest island ended without a diplomatic breakthrough.

French Finance Minister Roland Lescure told the Financial Times on Friday that economic ties between the U.S. and Europe could be damaged if Trump were to move to take the self-governing Danish territory.

“Greenland is a sovereign part of a sovereign country that is part of the EU. That shouldn’t be messed around [with],” he said.

When asked whether the EU would hit the U.S. with economic sanctions if it invaded Greenland, Lescure told FT: “I’m not going there. I mean, obviously, if that happened, we would be in a totally new world for sure, and we would have to adapt accordingly.”

His comments come as a Democratic-led U.S. delegation is expected to visit Copenhagen for talks with Danish MPs on Friday.

Trump has said the U.S. needs Greenland for national security reasons. Analysts told CNBC that he wants to keep rivals out of emerging trade routes and, potentially, mining of minerals that are critical in industries like defense.

“Significant” economic pressure in the form of tariffs or sanctions on Denmark by the U.S. “could likely mean a significant E.U. pushback, where the E.U. could respond in kind, leading to a sort of trade war with the U.S. as well as constant headline risks,” Dan Alamariu, chief geopolitical strategist at Alpine Macro, told CNBC over email.

“This would rattle markets,” he said. “It would also call into question NATO, though we don’t predict this happening, or NATO breaking apart. Domestic political and markets pushback would likely moderate any such pushes by the Trump administration.”