Inside Trump’s Turnabout on Greenland
Our national security correspondent David Sanger describes how President Trump’s escalations with Europe over Greenland seem to have led to him backing down.
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Our national security correspondent David Sanger describes how President Trump’s escalations with Europe over Greenland seem to have led to him backing down.
He says there’s a method to the madness. But European allies wonder whether the United States is reliable anymore.
The president’s quick reversal on tariffs over Greenland was another sign of his willingness to rip up the international order — even parts of it that he himself has made.
After President Trump aired his disdain for Europe, its leaders will gather in Brussels Thursday to take stock of what comes next.
After assailing Europe in a long speech at Davos, the president said he had won an agreement on the future of the Arctic territory.
Stocks in the U.S. stabilized on Wednesday after an earlier slump had spilled into markets in Asia and Europe, ending a period of relative calm.
Prime Minister Mark Carney got a standing ovation in Davos for starkly describing the end of Pax Americana. He is looking for new allies to help his country survive it.
President Trump threatened tariffs on European nations that sent military personnel to Greenland last week. Some have already gone home, but Denmark is now sending about 100 more.
As President Trump tries to coerce European leaders over Greenland, they are pondering the unthinkable: Is an 80-year-old alliance doomed?
The 3.3 percent rate for 2026 would match last year’s pace. Booming investment in artificial intelligence is buttressing global output.