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Home News

Trump faces tough reception in Davos as he Determined to seize Greenland

by Adham mohamed
January 21, 2026
in News
A A
 under Trump’s plan :US names Rubio, Tony Blair, Kushner to Gaza board

U.S. President Donald Trump barrels into Davos, Switzerland where he is likely to escalate his push for acquiring Greenland despite European protests in the biggest fraying of transatlantic ties in decades.

 Trump, who marked the end of his turbulent first year in office on Tuesday, is expected to overshadow the annual World Economic Forum (WEF) gathering where global elites discuss economic and political trends in the Swiss mountain resort.

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U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Wednesday that Trump’s arrival in Davos, where he is due to address world leaders, would be delayed by about three hours.

Trump had to change aircraft on Tuesday night after the crew identified what the White House called a “minor electrical issue” shortly after takeoff. Trump told a news conference on Tuesday that he would have meetings about the Danish territory of Greenland in Davos and was optimistic that an agreement could eventually be made.

 “I think we will work something out where NATO is going to be very happy and where we’re going to be very happy. But we need it for security purposes. We need it for national security,” he said.

Asked how far he is willing to go to acquire Greenland, Trump offered a cryptic response. “You’ll find out,” he said. In the days leading up to his visit to Davos, Trump has been unrelenting in making his case that “we need Greenland” as an Arctic security guardpost against Russia and China, and he has threatened a trade war with Europeans who oppose him.

 Emboldened by his ousting of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and seizing control of that country’s oil, Trump has talked of acting against Cuba and Colombia as well as Iran.

He has not ruled out the use of the U.S. military to snatch Greenland, which has an American military base.

 Sources familiar with the situation have previously said  that Trump’s push on Greenland is related to a legacy-building desire to expand the territory of the United States in the biggest way since 1959.

That was when two U.S. territories – Alaska and Hawaii – became the 49th and 50th U.S. states under Republican President Dwight Eisenhower.

NATO leaders have warned that Trump’s Greenland strategy could upend the alliance.

Trump has linked Greenland to his anger at not receiving a Nobel Peace Prize. In a breach of diplomatic protocol, Trump released the text of a private message he received from French President Emmanuel Macron in which Macron urged Trump to join him and other G7 leaders in Paris after Davos, an idea Trump dismissed.

“I do not understand what you are doing on Greenland,” wrote Macron. Leaders of Denmark and Greenland have offered a wide array of ways for a greater U.S. presence on the strategic island but this has not placated Trump, who posted on social media on Tuesday a doctored image showing him planting an American flag on the territory of 57,000 people.

 Trump’s purpose for going to Davos was to talk up the strength of the U.S. economy.

On Thursday, Trump is due to preside over a ceremony celebrating the Board of Peace, a group he formed that is aimed at redeveloping Gaza amid a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

 Trump has drawn some worries by saying the Board of Peace may work on global crises beyond Gaza, a role traditionally performed by the United Nations. Trump told a news conference on Tuesday he likes the United Nations but it has “never lived up to its potential.” He returns to Washington late on Thursday.

 

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