Dutch Foreign Minister calls Trump’s Greenland tariff threat ‘blackmail’

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Dutch Foreign Minister David van Weel speaks to the media, on the day of a Council of Europe diplomatic conference to launch a convention establishing the International Claims Commission for Ukraine, aimed at handling compensation claims related to Russia's war in Ukraine, in The Hague, Netherlands, December 16, 2025. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw

Dutch Foreign Minister David van Weel said the Greenland mission was intended to show the US Europe's willingness to help defend Greenland.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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AMSTERDAM - The Netherlands’ Foreign Minister on Jan 18 said that US President Donald Trump’s threat to impose new tariffs on European allies until they agree to sell Greenland to the United States is “blackmail”.

“It's blackmail what he's doing... and it's not necessary. It doesn't help the alliance (NATO) and it also doesn't help Greenland,” Mr David van Weel said in an interview on Dutch television. 

In a post on Truth Social on Jan 17, Mr Trump said

additional 10 per cent import tariffs would take effect

on Feb 1 on goods from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Finland and Britain – countries that have agreed to contribute personnel to a NATO exercise on Greenland.

Mr van Weel said the Greenland mission was intended to show the US Europe's willingness to help defend Greenland and he was opposed to Mr Trump making a connection with diplomacy over the island and trade.

Mr Trump has insisted he will settle for nothing less than full ownership of Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, which he has said is vital to US security because of its strategic location and mineral deposits. Leaders of both Denmark and Greenland have said the island is not for sale and does not want to be part of the United States.

Ambassadors from the European Union's 27 countries will convene on Jan 18 for an emergency meeting to discuss their response to Mr Trump’s tariff threat. REUTERS

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