Trump Links Greenland Takeover Bid to Nobel Prize Snub in Message to Norway’s PM: Report
Trump linked his Nobel Peace Prize snub to his Greenland acquisition push and tariff threats against eight European countries, escalating diplomatic tensions over the territory's sovereignty.
- On Jan 19, President Donald Trump sent a message to Norway's prime minister linking his Nobel Peace Prize snub to Greenland, calling for 'complete and total control of Greenland' and saying he no longer felt obliged to 'think purely of Peace.'
- Trump has long sought the Nobel, and he linked the snub last year to U.S. interests in Greenland, saying Denmark cannot protect it from Russia or China.
- Tariff threats escalated when Trump announced a 10% import tax from February 1 on goods from eight nations and EU ambassadors met on Jan 18 to consider tariffs on �93 billion of American goods.
- The escalation prompted outrage from European Union leaders and calls for the EU emergency summit on Jan 22 as European markets fell and thousands of Greenlanders protested.
- Beyond the note, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said the prize cannot be transferred, María Corina Machado gave her medal to Trump last week, and Denmark and Greenland leaders insist the island is not for sale while NATO and allied defence officials plan meetings.
411 Articles
411 Articles
Because he was denied the Nobel Peace Prize, Donald Trump explains in a letter to Norway's head of government that he no longer feels obliged to think exclusively of peace. Then follows a explosive warning.
Donald Trump sent a letter to the Prime Minister of Norway in which he linked his stance on Greenland with not having received the Nobel Peace Prize, in the framework of the US reaction to European support for Denmark and to the announcement of tariffs to several countries on the continent. In that message, released on Monday by the Norwegian government and confirmed by the White House, the President of the United States stated: “I no longer fee…
President Donald Trump warned in a letter published Monday that after being passed over for the Nobel Prize he does not feel obliged to think "only about peace".
The desire of the US president to do at all costs with Greenland, the threats of tariffs or the kick for not receiving the Nobel Prize extend the feeling that it is out of control Read
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