Greenland latest: Emergency summit to be held Thursday evening; Europe facing ‘existential moment’ - Tánaiste

US president ‘no longer feels obligation to think purely of peace’ after not being awarded Nobel prize

The Greenlandic flag flies over a building as the HDMS Vaedderen frigate of the Danish navy patrols behind in Nuuk, Greenland, on Sunday. Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images
The Greenlandic flag flies over a building as the HDMS Vaedderen frigate of the Danish navy patrols behind in Nuuk, Greenland, on Sunday. Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Main points

  • Donald Trump has said “no comment” when asked if he would consider using force to seize Greenland
  • The US president announced on Saturday he would impose tariffs on eight European countries from the beginning of February until a deal is reached on the purchase of the Danish territory
  • Destabilising effects of additional tariffs could be ‘enormous’, Tánaiste Simon Harris has said from Brussels
  • The European Commission is considering a package of counter tariffs
  • European powers would not be “blackmailed” and there would be a clear and united response, the German and ​French finance ministers said
  • Greenlandic prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said Trump’s threat to impose tariffs “do not change” Greenland’s right to self-determination

Key Reads


Jade Wilson - 6 days ago

That’s all from our live updates this evening on Greenland and Trump’s series of tariffs against European countries.

We’ll have more coverage again in the morning and throughout the week. Thanks for reading.


Jade Wilson - 7 days ago
UK Foreign Secretary says UK will be “pursuing every avenue” to prevent tariffs

UK The Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has spoken with the US government’s secretary of state Marco Rubio following Donald Trump’s tariff threats.

She said the UK Government will be “pursuing every avenue for discussions” with the US to prevent the tariffs and escalation of the trade war, as well as to “replace the threats to sovereignty and tariffs with a constructive, shared approach to our security in the Arctic”.

“I have spoken to secretary Rubio today and we have agreed to take forward further discussions on this issue.”

Nato allies “should do more” to protect Arctic security, UK Foreign Secretary adds

Nato allies “can and should do more” to protect Arctic security, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told the Commons.

In a statement, she said: “A trade war would hurt workers and businesses on both sides of the Atlantic. It would be in no-one’s interests.

“Both sides of the Atlantic should be working together on Arctic security and not moving apart, and that is why the Prime Minister and this Government are working intensively in the UK national interest to prevent this happening and to reach a resolution.”

Eyes turn to Swiss Alps and hopes Davos diplomacy might ease tensions

EU leaders are planning to use the annual elite economics summit in Davos to get the ear of Trump, who is travelling to the World Economic Forum in the Swiss Alps on Wednesday, Jack Power reports.

Leaders are hoping that progress might be made encouraging Trump to pull back from his threats to take over Greenland and hit allies with new tariffs, during meetings on the margins of the forum.

German chancellor Friedrich Merz is due to talk to Trump in Davos. A host of other leaders will be at the elite economics forum, including Taoiseach Micheál Martin.

Maros Sefcovic, the EU commissioner for trade who has been the executive body’s point guy on tariffs, is to meet commerce secretary Howard Lutnick and US trade envoy Jamieson Greer while he is in Switzerland.

It is understood top officials in the European Commission close to Ursula von der Leyen have been in contact with senior figures in the Trump administration, including Jared Kushner.

Von der Leyen will also be in Davos, but there is no word yet about whether the German politician and Trump will sit down and talk.

Afterwards the EU leaders in attendance will travel to Brussels, for a summit on Thursday evening, where they will compare notes of any discussions with Trump, and debate how best to play the current situation.


Jade Wilson - 7 days ago
Europe facing “existential moment”, says Tánaiste Simon Harris

Europe is facing into an “existential moment” in how it responds to US threats of further trade tariffs and demands to take over Greenland, Tánaiste and Minister for Finance Simon Harris has told a meeting of Eurogroup ministers.

It is understood the Fine Gael leader told his counterparts that the EU needed to push for dialogue with the White House, to defuse the currently unprecedented tensions, our Europe Correspondent, Jack Power, reports.

Repeating comments made in remarks to reporters in Brussels ahead of the meeting, Mr Harris called for “cool heads” in how Europe responded to Trump.


Jade Wilson - 7 days ago
Taoiseach emphasises need for “continued dialogue” in Ministerial meeting

A Ministerial meeting arranged at short notice by Taoiseach Micheál Martin on Monday expressed support for the integrity and rights of the people of Greenland in the face of Donald Trump escalating his demands to acquire the Danish territory, our political correspondent, Harry McGee, reports.

It was joined by Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee; Minister of State for European Affairs Thomas Byrne and the leading Independent Minister of State Sean Canney. Senior officials from the Department of Finance also attended the meeting.

The Taoiseach is understood to have emphasised the need for continued dialogue on the matter at EU and global level. Minister McEntee is attending a meeting of EU foreign ministers today, while the Taoiseach will cut short his visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland to attend a hastily-arranged summit of EU leaders on Thursday.


Jade Wilson - 7 days ago

Good evening. I’ll be taking over from my colleague Jack White to bring you further updates on this story tonight. We’ll have more from our correspondents shortly.


Jack White - 7 days ago
Canada, Greenland discuss potential Nato mission in Arctic, Canada considering sending troops

Denmark and ‍Greenland have discussed the ‍possibility of having a ‌Nato mission ⁠in Greenland and the ‌Arctic, ​Danish ‍defence minister Troels Lund Poulsen ⁠said on ⁠Monday.

He was speaking ⁠after a meeting ‍with Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte and Greenlandic ‌foreign minister ‌Vivian Motzfeldt.

Separately, Canada ​is considering whether to send a small contingent of troops to ‍Greenland to take part in Nato military exercises, a source directly ‍familiar with the matter said on Monday.

The news was first reported by the CBC News and the Globe and ‌Mail newspaper.

Military officials have presented plans for the operation ⁠to the government and are awaiting a decision from ‌prime ​minister Mark ‍Carney, said the source, who requested anonymity given the sensitivity of the matter.

Carney’s office declined to comment.

“We’re concerned about this escalation, to be absolutely clear ... we always will support sovereignty and territorial integrity of countries, wherever their geographic location is,” Carney ‌told reporters ‌in Doha on Sunday.

Germany, France, Sweden, Norway, Finland and the Netherlands have said ⁠they are sending military staff to begin preparations for larger drills later this year. – Reuters


Jack White - 7 days ago
O’Neill ‘deeply concerned’ about potential Trump tariff impact on North

Northern Ireland’s First Minister Michelle O’Neill has said she is “deeply concerned” about the potential impact on the region of Trump’s threat to impose tariffs on US allies unless they support his proposed takeover of Greenland.

O’Neill told the Assembly that Economy Minister Caiomhe Archibald had already written to both the UK and Irish governments about the threat, adding that international law had to prevail.

DUP leader Gavin Robinson said it was widely recognised that tariff differentials would not be beneficial for Northern Ireland.

Ms O’Neill was asked about the situation during question time at the Northern Ireland Assembly on Monday. She told MLAs that people were “aghast” at the developments.

The First Minister added: “This is another breach of international law and an attempt to snatch territory.

“I think it’s deeply concerning that the approach that’s being taken in terms of trade, to bully others into kowtowing to a position adopted in the US is quite frankly shocking, and something that I think that international leaders need to take very seriously.

“You cannot be bullied by another country just to support your whim, so I think that international law needs to prevail.”

Ms O’Neill added: “I do think just in terms of what’s actually posed in a economic way, in terms of the tariffs, I’m deeply concerned about what that means for ourselves here.

“We have a special and unique circumstance in a post-Brexit world, and what happens across the EU or what happens in Britain, what happens elsewhere, has a real impact for us. – PA


Jack White - 7 days ago

It’s ‍up to the ‍European Union, not Denmark alone, ‌to decide ⁠the EU’s ‌response ​to ‍Trump’s threat ⁠to ⁠impose tariffs over Greenland, ⁠Denmark’s foreign ‍minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told reporters in London ‌on ‌Monday. – Reuters


Jack White - 7 days ago

​Trump has declined to say ‍whether he would use ‌force to ⁠seize Greenland ‌in ​an interview ‍published in NBC News on ⁠Monday.

“No ⁠comment,” Trump told ⁠the network ‍in a brief telephone interview when asked if he ‌would use ‌force to seize ‌Greenland. – Reuters


Jack White - 7 days ago
Destabilising effects of additional tariffs could be ‘enormous’, Tánaiste says

The destabilising effects of additional tariffs on European countries threatened by US president Donald Trump could “potentially be enormous”, Tánaiste and Minister for Finance Simon Harris has said.

Speaking to reporters in Brussels, where he is attending meetings of the Economic and Financial Affairs Council and the Eurogroup over the next two days, Mr Harris said it is “more important than ever now that we seek dialogue”, adding that it is “time for cool heads”.

Mr Harris said any deviation from the trade agreement in place with the US could have “potentially very, very significant consequences”.

Noting that Europe “stands united” and “will always stand with Greenland”, he called for dialogue in a “cool and calm way”, using the “brief window” available.

“But we will of course prepare to respond accordingly should that be required,” he said.

Mr Harris said when the EU and the US work together, it is beneficial for both sides, adding:

“It’s president Trump who in recent days has decided to threaten Europe with additional tariffs, ones that have a very significant destabilising effect.

“The destabilising effect could potentially be enormous, the cascading effect could be very, very significant.”


Jack White - 7 days ago
What is the EU’s anti-coercion instrument?

Described by Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee as an “extreme measure” and a “last resort” in response to Donald Trump’s latest threat of tariffs, the EU’s anti-coercion instrument has never been used.

First proposed in 2021 in response to criticism within the EU that the first Trump administration and China had used trade as a political tool, the anti-coercion instrument allows it to retaliate against economic pressure used to force a policy shift.

It offers far wider scope for action than just counter tariffs on US ‌exports.

The anti-coercion instrument ‍has a 10-point list of possible measures on goods and services which include:

  • Curbs on imports or exports of goods such as through quotas or licences
  • Restrictions to public tenders in the bloc, worth some €2 trillion euros per year. Here the EU has two options: Bids, such as for ⁠construction or defence procurement, could be excluded if US goods or services make up more than 50 per cent of the potential contract. Alternatively, ⁠a penalty score adjustment could be attached to US ⁠bids
  • Measures impacting services in which the US has a trade surplus with the EU, including from digital service providers Amazon, Microsoft, Netflix or Uber
  • Curbs on foreign direct investment from the United States, which ‍is the world’s biggest investor in the EU
  • Restrictions on protection of intellectual property rights, on access to financial services markets and on the ability to sell chemicals or food in the EU

The EU is supposed to select measures that are likely to be most effective to stop the coercive behaviour by a third country and potentially repair injury.

How is it invoked by the EU?

The European Commission has up to ‌four months to examine possible cases of coercion. If it finds a foreign country’s measures constitute coercion, it puts this to EU members, which have another eight to 10 weeks to confirm the finding.

Confirmation requires a qualified ‌majority of EU members – a higher hurdle to clear than that for applying retaliatory tariffs.

The Commission would normally then negotiate with the foreign country in a bid ⁠to stop the coercion. If that fails, it can implement anti-coercion instrument measures, again subject to a vote by EU members. These should enter into force within three months.

The whole process could take anywhere from a few months to a year to complete. – Reuters


Jack White - 7 days ago
German chancellor and leader of the German Christian Democrats (CDU) Friedrich Merz speaks at CDU headquarters to the media on Monday in Berlin, Germany. 
Photograph: Nadja Wohlleben/Getty Images
German chancellor and leader of the German Christian Democrats (CDU) Friedrich Merz speaks at CDU headquarters to the media on Monday in Berlin, Germany. Photograph: Nadja Wohlleben/Getty Images

German chancellor Friedrich Merz indicated Germany is less willing than France to unleash the European Union’s strongest trade countermeasure in response to US president Donald Trump’s latest tariff threats but would back its deployment if necessary.

Merz said Germany is in close contact with its EU partners, as well as allies Britain and Norway, over Trump’s latest onslaught, and all agreed that it’s important to prevent any escalation that would further damage transatlantic relations and crimp economic activity.

While French President Emmanuel Macron intends to request the activation of the EU’s anti-coercion instrument, Bloomberg reported over the weekend, Merz said Germany’s heavier dependence on exports than its western neighbour means it has to be more cautious.

“France is affected by the American tariffs to a different extent than we are,” Merz told reporters Monday after a leadership meeting of his CDU party in Berlin, adding that it was therefore understandable that Macron wanted “to react a little more harshly than we do.”

“Nevertheless, we are trying and succeeding in adopting a common position” before a special EU summit to discuss the next steps on Thursday in Brussels, Merz said. – Bloomberg


Jack White - 7 days ago

Fianna Fáil MEP Billy Kelleher has said there is “deep concern” over Donald Trump’s threat to impose tariffs, describing it as a “deep fracture” in transatlantic relations.

Noting that the US president is “very often transactional”, Mr Kelleher said there could be discussions over the coming days to “address his concerns around security in Greenland” while also protecting the sovereignty of Greenland.

Speaking on RTÉ’s One O’Clock news, he said key US products were identified for tariffs to “put pressure on the Trump administration” before an agreement was reached last summer.

“If president Trump continues as he is, that means that particular agreement has been undermined, it is no longer in good faith, and we would have to bring forward some retaliatory measures,” he said.

“I still hope that we can put enough pressure on president Trump directly, but equally that there might still be enough sane people in the Republican Party at leadership level that will talk him down from this bizarre decision in the first place,” Mr Kelleher said.


Jack White - 7 days ago
EU to ‘show restraint’ with US ‘for the moment’, says EU Commission spokesman

The EU will take a “responsible” and “mature” approach, and show restraint in its relations with the US, “at least for the moment”, a spokesman for the European Commission has said.

Olof Gill said “intensive discussions” are ongoing among officials after Donald Trump threatened to impose tariffs on eight European countries until a deal is reached on the US’s acquisition of Greenland.

Speaking on RTÉ Radio’s News at One, Mr Gill noted that an “extraordinary” meeting of EU leaders will be held on Thursday, during which options to respond to the threat will be considered.

Asked if reaching an agreement on a response might be difficult, given that most EU member states would not be directly affected by Trump’s threatened tariffs, Mr Gill said there is currently a “striking degree of unity” among member states.

“We need to stay united, we need to stay focused in order to project the necessary strengths that lead to an outcome that avoids escalation, that avoids tariffs,” he said.

Mr Gill noted that tools to respond to economic threats have “always been on the table” and are “ready should we need them”, though he said the current priority is to engage and not escalate.

“But in the worst-case scenario, should these threats translate into actual tariffs being imposed, we do have tools at our disposal. We are prepared to use them, and we’ll do everything we need to do to protect our legitimate economic interests,” he said.

Among those tools is the EU’s anti-coercion instrument, he confirmed, though this is primarily meant to act as a “deterrent”.

“Right now, there is no appetite among a majority of EU member states to deploy it. Of course, that can change,” he said, describing it as a “fluid situation”.

Asked if it was time to take a “tougher response” to US president Donald Trump, Mr Gill said European leadership is characterised by a “responsible, mature” and “very sensible approach”.

“That approach has great weight and value on the global stage,” he said, noting that “so many countries around the world are lining up to sign trade deals with us”, such as the controversial Mercosur trade deal.

“There is value in the EU being a serious, responsible, mature actor showing restraint, and that’s the approach we’re going to have in our relations with the US, at least for the moment,” he said.


Jack White - 7 days ago
Greenlandic prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen taking part in a demonstration on Saturday that gathered almost a third of the Nuuk's population to protest against the US president's plans to take Greenland. Photograph: Alessandro Rampazzo/ AFP via Getty
Greenlandic prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen taking part in a demonstration on Saturday that gathered almost a third of the Nuuk's population to protest against the US president's plans to take Greenland. Photograph: Alessandro Rampazzo/ AFP via Getty

Greenlandic prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen has said Donald Trump’s threat to impose tariffs “do not change” Greenland’s right to self-determination.

“We will not allow ourselves to be pressured. We stand firm on dialogue, on respect and on international law,” he said in a post on Facebook.

He said demonstrations in Greenland and Denmark have shown a “strong and dignified unity”.

Thousands of people took part in a protest in Greenland’s capital, Nuuk, on Saturday.


Jack White - 7 days ago
EU’s response to Trump threat will be ‘firm and responsible’

The European Union continues to engage “at all levels” ‍with the United States, while preparing its response to US president ‌Donald Trump’s new tariff threat, European Commission ⁠spokesman Olof Gill said on Monday.

The ‌EU ​is ‍ready to use every tool at its disposal to protect the bloc’s ⁠economic interests, he said, ⁠adding that the ⁠possible use of the EU’s anti-coercion instrument is not ‍off the table.

Although the EU’s main aim continues to be to avoid escalation, its response will “firm and responsible”, he said.

“The ‌EU’s anti-coercion instrument’s ‌primary goal is to act as deterrent, just mentioning ‌the possibility of its use ⁠can have the desired effect,” he said.


Jack White - 7 days ago
Emergency EU summit to be held on Thursday evening

EU leaders are set to convene for an emergency summit in Brussels on Thursday following Donald Trump’s threat to impose new tariffs on eight EU countries over his demand to acquire Greenland.

The summit is scheduled to start at 6pm Irish time, an EU spokesperson said.

On Wednesday, Mr Trump is due to travel to Switzerland where he will address the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos.

He is expected to meet global business figures there, sources familiar with the matter said, as the US president’s presence looms large over the annual gathering of the global elite.

Business leaders, including CEOs in financial services, crypto and consulting, were invited to a reception after Trump’s address, the sources told Reuters on Monday. The agenda was unclear.

The conference agenda has to some extent been overtaken by his dramatic policy moves, including his demand in recent days that the United States ‍take over Greenland.

Danish officials have decided not to attend this year’s meeting amid the intensifying dispute over Greenland.

“Danish government representatives were invited this year, and any decisions on attendance are a matter for the government concerned,” the Forum said in a statement to Bloomberg. “We can confirm that the Danish government will not be represented in Davos this week.” – Reuters/Bloomberg


Jack White - 7 days ago

A spokesman for the European Commission has said he “can’t discount the possibility” that Mr Trump and Ursula von der Leyen may sit down together for talks in Davos, on the margins of the World Economic Forum this week.

However, he said there was no meeting between the US president and the chief of the EU’s executive body in the diary at present, Europe Correspondent Jack Power reports.


Jack White - 7 days ago

A lot will turn on what happens inside the room when the leaders of the European Union’s 27 states meet in Brussels on Thursday for an emergency summit, Europe Correspondent Jack Power writes.

The Irish Government, who have been one of the loudest voices for EU restraint in the face of threats from Trump during his second term, might find the argument against retaliation does not land as it did during EU-US tariff negotiations last year. Dialogue doesn’t really work if one side shows no interest of talking.

Taoiseach Micheál Martin will have to walk a fine line. A trade war, or worse, between Europe and the United States would be particularly devastating for the Republic, given its close trade ties with Washington, and the concentration of US multinational tech and pharma firms in the State.

French president Emmanuel Macron is expected to push for the EU to hit back hard, using emergency anti-coercion powers, to put some pressure on Mr Trump. The so-called “big bazooka” would allow the European Commission to restrict US companies’ ability to operate in the EU market.

Mr Martin will probably have an ally in Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni, who has been another opponent of any response that would further antagonise the White House. The stance taken by German chancellor Friedrich Merz will be one to watch.

It is rare such an emergency gathering of EU leaders is called. There was one when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and others during the Covid-19 pandemic and the Brexit negotiations.

It is safe to assume other leaders will take some guidance from Denmark’s prime minister Mette Frederiksen. Until now the Danish government had been trying to take the political heat out of the Greenland dispute, in the hopes Mr Trump could be convinced the US does not need to own the island, to shore up its security interests in the Arctic region.

A middle ground option being considered would see the EU hit €93 billion worth of trade coming from the US, from soybeans to Harley-Davidson motorbikes, with retaliatory tariffs.

Whether the European Union has the bottle, and political unity, required to ramp up the pressure, and absorb the possible painful US reaction that initially follows, is still an open question right now.


Jack White - 7 days ago
‘The limit has been reached’: German finance minister says European countries will not be ‘blackmailed’ by Trump
German finance minister Lars Klingbeil and his French counterpart Roland Lescure give a joint statement on Monday in Berlin. Photograph: John MacDougall/AFP via Getty
German finance minister Lars Klingbeil and his French counterpart Roland Lescure give a joint statement on Monday in Berlin. Photograph: John MacDougall/AFP via Getty

European powers will not be “blackmailed” and there would be a clear and united response ‍to threats of escalated US tariffs over Greenland, the German and ​French finance ministers have said.

“Germany and France agree: we will not allow ourselves to be blackmailed,” German finance minister Lars Klingbeil ‌said at his ministry where he received his French counterpart on Monday morning.

“Blackmail between allies of 250 years, blackmail between friends, is obviously unacceptable,” French ⁠finance minister Roland Lescure added.

EU leaders are set ‌to ​discuss ‍options at an emergency summit in Brussels on Thursday. One option is a package of tariffs on €93 billion of US imports that could automatically kick in on February 6th after a six-month suspension.

“We Europeans must make it clear: ⁠the limit has been reached,” Mr Klingbeil said. “Our hand is extended but we are not prepared to be ⁠blackmailed.”

The other option is the so far ⁠never used anti-coercion instrument, which could limit access to public tenders, investments or banking activity or restrict trade in services, in which the US has a surplus with the ‍bloc, including in digital services.

Mr Lescure said although the EU’s anti-coercion instrument was above all a deterrent, it should be considered in the current circumstances.

“France wants us to examine this possibility, hoping, of course, that deterrence will prevail,” he said. He added that he hoped the transatlantic relationship will return to being “friendly and based on negotiation, rather than a relationship based on threats and blackmail”.

Mr Klingbeil said he was not interested in escalation, as it would come at ‌the expense of economies ‌on both sides of the Atlantic. – Reuters


Jack White - 7 days ago
Use of tariffs against allies is ‘completely wrong’, says UK PM
The UK prime minister batted away suggestions that Britain should take 'performative' retaliatory action against the US, such as cancelling the state visit later this year to the US of King Charles. Photograph: Jordan Pettitt/WPA Pool/Getty Images
The UK prime minister batted away suggestions that Britain should take 'performative' retaliatory action against the US, such as cancelling the state visit later this year to the US of King Charles. Photograph: Jordan Pettitt/WPA Pool/Getty Images

Britain’s prime minister Keir Starmer has held an emergency press conference in Downing Street where he said he will try to avoid a trade war with the US, which has announced tariffs on Britain over its stance on Greenland.

Our London Correspondent Mark Paul reports:

“The use of tariffs against allies is completely wrong,” said Mr Starmer on Monday morning, during an address to the nation of Britain.

The UK prime minister had been due to give a speech in Yorkshire on the cost of living on Monday morning, but he cancelled that to give the emergency address from Downing Street – an indication of the seriousness with which US president Donald Trump’s threats to take control of Greenland are being taken in Britain.

Mr Starmer said he spoke to Mr Trump by phone on Sunday night and told him that the future of Greenland was for the people of the Arctic territory and also the people of Denmark, which administers Greenland, to decide alone.

“There is a principle here that cannot be set aside,” he said.

However, the UK prime minister batted away suggestions that Britain should take “performative” retaliatory action against the US, such as cancelling the state visit later this year to the US of King Charles.

“We will not indulge in gesture politics,” he said.

While he did not definitively rule out levying retaliatory tariffs against the US, he said a trade war over Greenland was “in no one’s interests”.

“The relationship between the US and UK matters profoundly,” he said, adding: “We are determined to keep that relationship strong and constructive and focused on results.”

“Mature alliances are not about pretending differences don’t exist ... Britain is a pragmatic country, we look for agreement ... But it does not mean being passive.”

Mr Starmer said the crisis over Greenland was a “moment for all of Britain to pull together”. He said that he understood why Mr Trump’s tariff threats had been “badly received across all of the UK”.

But, he added, it was vital for Britain to maintain its close military and trade partnerships with the US, including over Britain’s nuclear capabilities, which is believed to need US assistance to function effectively.

“Our nuclear deterrent requires us to have a good relationship with the US,” said Mr Starmer. He said he didn’t think the US president would consider military action over Greenland, and suggested he would seek to speak to him again in the coming days.

“This is a moment for the whole country to pull together,” he said.


Jack White - 7 days ago

It is clear the US-EU trade deal agreed last summer “will not proceed any more”, the chair of the European Parliament’s International Trade Committee has said following Donald Trump’s “unacceptable” threat.

German MEP Bernd Lange said on Monday that the fate of the deal, which was described by Department of Finance officials as being of “critical importance” to the Irish economy, will be decided on Wednesday.

“We are discussing this quite intensively because there was a breaking of the deal by the United States even before this action from Trump so we were quite sceptical.

“After this threat, it’s totally clear this deal will be put on ice, and we will not proceed any more. We will discuss it and decide it finally on Wednesday,” he told RTÉ’s Morning Ireland.

The deal, which set US tariffs on imports from the EU at 15 per cent in exchange for Europe not applying levies on American exports, was described in Department of Finance documents published last Friday as being “of critical importance to the Irish economy”.

Mr Lange said counter measures are “ready”, having been drawn up before trade negotiations with the US last year.

“The list is there,” he said, adding that it could be enforced “immediately”.

He said Mr Trump’s use of tariffs as a political threat on Saturday is “totally unacceptable”.

Mr Lange said security is a “weakness” of the EU, adding that this was the “main reason” the trade deal was accepted in Scotland last summer.

“But on the other side, we have to defend our European sovereignty,” he said, adding: “The experience in the last year is totally clear that if we are not going in a clear and offensive manner, at the end of the day, it is totally unsecure and unpredictable what is happening in the United States.”


Jack White - 7 days ago

British prime minister Keir Starmer said on Monday ‍that calm discussion between allies was needed on Greenland to ‍ensure that historic alliances could endure.

Mr Starmer told a press conference that ⁠Britain’s alliance with the United States had provided ‌security ​and prosperity ‍for decades, and said he was determined to maintain those ties.

But he said Mr Trump’s threats to impose ⁠escalating tariffs on Britain and European allies ⁠until the US was ⁠allowed to buy Greenland was wrong. He said the future of Greenland ‍must be decided by Denmark alone.

“Alliances endure because they’re built on respect and partnership, not pressure,” he said.

“That is why I’ve said the use of tariffs against allies is completely wrong. It ‌is not ‌the right way to resolve differences within an alliance.”

He said on Greenland: “the right ‌way to approach an issue of this seriousness is ⁠through calm discussion between allies”.

He said tariffs ‌should not ⁠be used ‌against allies, ​and ‍that his focus was to ⁠ensure ⁠a “tariff war” is avoided. – Reuters


Jack White - 7 days ago
Trump links Greenland threats to Nobel Peace Prize snub in letter to Norwegian PM

Here is the full text of the letter sent by Donald Trump to Norwegian prime minister Jonas Gahr ‍Stoere:

“Dear Jonas: Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America.

“Denmark cannot protect that land from Russia or China, and why do they have a “right of ownership” anyway? There are no written documents, it’s only that a boat landed there hundreds of years ago, but we had boats landing there, also. I have done more for Nato than any other person since its founding, and now, Nato should do something for the United States. The World is not secure unless we have Complete and Total Control of Greenland. Thank you! President DJT”

The Nobel Peace Prize isn’t decided by the Norwegian government but is awarded by an independent committee.

Trump’s letter, which was first reported by a PBS journalist on X, was shared by Trump’s National Security Council with several other European governments, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private correspondence. – Bloomberg


Jack White - 7 days ago

Tánaiste and Minister for Finance Simon Harris is attending a meeting of EU finance ministers on Monday, where the threat of fresh tariffs by the US will be discussed.

In advance of the meeting, Mr Harris said an “incredible amount of work” was put into reaching an agreement with the US to protect transatlantic economic activity.

He said developments which “seek to undermine” and “move away from that by the US are most concerning and very unwelcome”.

“Ireland always favours agreement and dialogue. This threat of penalising European economies and businesses and linking that with Greenland is completely unacceptable and I know Europe will stand united and co-ordinated in considering how to respond,” he said.


Jack White - 7 days ago
Trump told Norwegian PM he no longer feels an ‘obligation to think purely of peace’

US president Donald Trump told ‍Norwegian prime minister Jonas Gahr ‍Stoere he no longer felt an “obligation to think ‌purely of Peace” ⁠after the Norwegian Nobel Committee ‌did ​not ‍award him the Nobel Peace Prize, as he ⁠repeated his demand ⁠for control of ⁠Greenland in a letter seen ‍by Reuters.

The Norwegian prime minister’s office did not immediately reply to a request for ‌comment. – Reuters


Jack White - 7 days ago

UK prime minister Keir Starmer is due to speak at Downing Street on Monday following Donald Trump’s threats to ramp up tariffs until a deal is reached on Greenland.

Mr Starmer has told the US president it is “wrong” to apply tariffs to the UK and other European allies opposing his efforts to take over Greenland.

He will set out the UK’s approach to working with allies and how the country will be “led by our values”, according to a Government source.

It comes as UN secretary general Antonio Guterres warned the UN has “no leverage” in resolving major global conflicts compared to the “big powers”, adding the US appears to believe its own power is more important than international law.

“There are those that believe the power of law should be replaced by the law of power,” Mr Guterres told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“Indeed, when one sees the present policy of the United States, there is a clear conviction that multilateral solutions are not relevant and that what matters is the exercise of the power and the influence of the United States and sometimes in this respect by the norms of international law”. – PA


Jack White - 7 days ago

Minister for Foreign Affairs Helen McEntee has said the EU must “remain calm” in considering its response to Donald Trump’s vow to impose tariffs, saying there should be no “knee-jerk reactions”.

Speaking on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland on Monday, Ms McEntee described the US president’s vow to implement tariffs on eight European countries until a deal is reached for the US to purchase Greenland as “unprecedented”.

“I think it’s important that we remain calm and that there aren’t knee-jerk reactions here. The EU has to look to see what options we have,” she said.

Noting that options are due to be discussed at a meeting of EU leaders this week, Ms McEntee said: “We need to be measured here in our response”, adding that dialogue and engagement must be the first step with the US.

She said the anti-coercion instrument, which would restrict access to the single market, is an “extreme measure” and “is there as a last resort”.

Asked if the development was a result of Trump’s power “going unchecked”, the Minister said:

“I certainly feel that this is an approach that we have never seen from the US, and certainly, there are decisions being taken and directions being taken that we have never seen before, but that doesn’t mean that we should change the response and the approach that we take.

“From Ireland’s perspective, we share excellent relations with the US, and have always done so through various different administrations, but we are a member of the EU, and we will remain unified in our response,” she said.

Ms McEntee reiterated that “what happens to Greenland is for the people of Greenland and for the people of Denmark”.

“But that doesn’t mean we don’t go to the US, that we don’t engage,” she said, adding that “we need to be firm with our friends as well.”

Asked about the annual St Patrick’s Day visit to the White House, Ms McEntee said:

“The US is an excellent partner of Ireland. We have huge relations and ties, not just economically but culturally, and so many other ways.

“But that does not mean where we see wrongdoing, that does not mean where we disagree, that we don’t call it out.

“I think the White House has always been a perfect opportunity for our Taoiseach and for other colleagues to raise issues of concern.”