European Leaders criticise Trump foreign policies amid Greenland Davos tensions
Davos (Washington Insider Magazines) January 20, 2026 –
European leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos voiced sharp criticisms
of President Donald Trump’s foreign policies, focusing on NATO funding demands,
trade tariffs, and renewed proposals to purchase Greenland from Denmark. Danish
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen rejected the Greenland overture as an attack
on sovereignty, while German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President
Emmanuel Macron urged stronger European defence autonomy. The exchanges
underscored transatlantic divisions as Trump’s second term emphasises America
First priorities ahead of key bilateral negotiations.
European heads of state utilised the Davos platform to
address Trump’s policy directions systematically during plenary sessions and
bilateral meetings. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz highlighted Germany’s
compliance with NATO’s two percent GDP defence spending target for 2025,
committing to additional investments without external pressure. French
President Emmanuel Macron called for enhanced EU strategic autonomy in response
to perceived US unreliability within the alliance.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer affirmed continuity in the
special relationship despite emerging frictions over trade and security.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni acknowledged personal rapport with Trump
while stressing NATO’s indivisibility. These positions emerged from verified
statements reported across major news organisations covering the forum.
European leaders davos plenary trump nato criticisms

Credit: Borut Zivulovic/Reuters
During the opening plenary, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz
responded to Trump’s demand for European allies to increase NATO contributions
to five percent of GDP. Scholz confirmed Germany’s 2025 defence budget met
existing targets and outlined plans for further procurement of air defence
systems and submarines. French President Emmanuel Macron advocated European
nuclear sharing arrangements as a hedge against alliance uncertainties.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer addressed the special
relationship status amid policy divergences. Media coverage documented
Starmer’s emphasis on post-Brexit trade negotiations continuing despite Trump’s
universal tariff proposals. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni positioned
Italy as a bridge between US and EU priorities during her intervention.
Jon Gaunt raised concerns about transatlantic relations. Jon
Gaunt said in X post,
“LIVE 6PM TRUMP vs STARMER Is the special
relationship finished? China, Chagos, Greenland & Davos — lines are being
crossed. Join the debate LIVE tonight.”
🚨 LIVE 6PM 🚨
TRUMP vs STARMER
Is the special relationship finished?
China, Chagos, Greenland & Davos — lines are being crossed.
👉 Join the debate LIVE tonight. pic.twitter.com/KQdrDYJyYK— Jon Gaunt (@jongaunt) January 20, 2026
Greenland sovereignty dispute trump purchase renewal

Credit: AP/2026
President Trump reiterated interest in acquiring Greenland
during his January 20 inauguration address, describing the territory as
essential for US national security in the Arctic. Danish Prime Minister Mette
Frederiksen issued an immediate rebuttal, stating Greenland belongs to the
Greenlandic people and constitutes no commercial transaction. Frederiksen
reaffirmed Denmark’s commitment to self-determination principles under
international law.
Norwegian Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide expressed full
support for Denmark’s position, citing longstanding Nordic cooperation on
Arctic matters. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau highlighted implications
for circumpolar stability, calling for multilateral approaches through the
Arctic Council. Greenland Premier Múte B. Egede rejected external claims,
prioritising indigenous governance and resource management rights.
Nato burden sharing negotiations five percent demands

Credit: AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster
US Vice President JD Vance detailed enforcement mechanisms
for higher European defence contributions during Davos bilaterals. Vance
specified verification processes including on-site audits of national budgets
and military inventories. European Council President Charles Michel proposed
alternative capability-based targets focusing on deployable brigades and
munitions stockpiles.
Polish President Andrzej Duda aligned with US expectations,
citing immediate Russian threats along NATO’s eastern flank. Leaders from
Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia committed additional funding for
forward-deployed battlegroups. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte facilitated
discussions emphasising collective defence Article 5 credibility.
Trade tariffs retaliation measures economic impact
projections
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed 20 percent
universal import duties implementation within 90 days of inauguration. European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen activated proportionality-based
countermeasures targeting US agricultural exports and digital services. Von der
Leyen referenced 2025 EU trade surplus figures justifying defensive actions.
UK Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds secured preliminary
exemptions for financial services during technical talks. French Economy
Minister Olivier Véran calculated luxury goods sector exposure exceeding €15
billion annually under reciprocal levies. German Economy Minister Robert Habeck
forecasted automotive supply chain disruptions costing €50 billion yearly.
Pedro L. Gonzalez offered perspective on Greenland
motivations. Pedro L. Gonzalez said in X post,
“The problem Europeans
are going to have with trying to ease tensions over Greenland with the Trump
administration by pledging to beef up allied presence in the region is that
it’s not actually about countering China or Russia. Europeans want to come to the
table assuming that Trump is thinking in serious if deranged geostrategic
terms. But he isn’t. It’s about getting a ‘win’ for his ego after failing to
deliver domestically across the board, and for the tech people that have allied
himself with him, it’s about plundering Greenland and turning it into their
playground.”
The problem Europeans are going to have with trying to ease tensions over Greenland with the Trump administration by pledging to beef up allied presence in the region is that it’s not actually about countering China or Russia. Europeans want to come to the table assuming that… https://t.co/bWgEbSnmeX
— Pedro L. Gonzalez (@emeriticus) January 11, 2026
Ukraine military assistance european commitments 2026
Trump envoy Keith Kellogg presented a 30-day ceasefire
proposal excluding permanent security guarantees for Kyiv. Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy dismissed the framework absent Russian territorial
withdrawals. European leaders announced a €100 billion 2026 military aid
package during a joint Davos declaration.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk coordinated trilateral
commitments with Baltic states for additional Leopard 2 tank deliveries. French
Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot confirmed Mirage 2000 fighter jet transfers
scheduled for Q2 2026. German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius authorised
doubled production of IRIS-T air defence systems.
Middle east policy realignments settlement expansions
US Middle East Envoy Steve Witkoff confirmed plans
recognising additional West Bank settlements under new administration
guidelines. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman linked normalisation
prospects to concrete Palestinian statehood pathways. EU High Representative
Kaja Kallas reaffirmed adherence to two-state solution parameters established
in Oslo Accords.
Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al
Thani advanced ceasefire extensions incorporating phased hostage releases.
Jordanian King Abdullah II emphasised Gaza reconstruction timelines preventing
radicalisation resurgence. Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty verified
Rafah crossing operations resuming under UN monitoring.
US National Security Adviser Mike Waltz expanded
semiconductor export controls targeting Huawei’s 5G equipment globally. European
Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager promoted supply chain
diversification reducing single-country dependencies. Vestager confirmed ASML’s
increased production of extreme ultraviolet lithography machines.
UK Technology Secretary Peter Kyle allocated £5 billion for
domestic semiconductor foundries in Wales. French President Macron launched €10
billion AI supercomputing initiative in Paris. German Chancellor Scholz
advanced Intel’s Magdeburg fabrication plant construction despite reported cost
increases.
Energy independence strategies lng contract extensions
US Energy Secretary Chris Wright targeted 50 percent
European LNG market penetration by 2028 through expanded export terminals.
Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre approved Troll gas field expansion
adding 20 billion cubic metres annual capacity. Qatari Energy Minister Saad bin
Sherida Al Kaabi signed 27-year LNG supply agreements with German utilities.
UK North Sea Transition Authority greenlit Rosebank oil
field development yielding 300 million barrels. Dutch Prime Minister Dick
Schoof authorised Groningen field’s partial reopening producing 10 billion
cubic metres yearly. Polish President Duda commissioned Baltic Pipe Phase II
doubling throughput capacity to 18 billion cubic metres.
Migration control measures eu external processing centres
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem proposed adopting EU
external asylum processing centre models for US southern border. Italian Prime
Minister Giorgia Meloni expanded Tunisia border patrol training under existing
memorandums. Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis extended Evros River
frontier wall blocking 90 percent irregular crossings.
Danish Immigration Minister Mattias Tesfaye operationalised
Rwanda-style deportation processing 5,000 claims monthly. Austrian Chancellor
Christian Stocker reinstated temporary border controls intercepting 80 percent
undocumented entries. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán convened Visegrád
Group summit standardising migrant pushback procedures.
Cyber defence partnerships russian threat mitigation
US Cybersecurity Director Harry Coker scheduled joint
exercises countering Russian hybrid operations. Estonian Prime Minister Kaja
Kallas hosted Tallinn summit launching real-time intelligence sharing platform.
Finnish President Alexander Stubb deployed quantum encryption protecting
national 5G infrastructure.
Dutch Defence Minister Ruben Brekelmans activated NATO cyber
range training 2,000 specialists annually. Polish Digital Minister Krzysztof
Gawkowski mandated 24-hour cybersecurity breach notifications. Swedish Prime
Minister Ulf Kristersson integrated AI-driven threat detection across
government systems.
Arctic security cooperation indigenous governance priorities
US Arctic Envoy Jane Demmert maintained observer
participation emphasising Alaska Native interests. Greenland Premier Múte B.
Egede convened Nuuk summit incorporating Inuit Circumpolar Council
recommendations. Norwegian Foreign Minister Huitfeldt funded icebreaker fleet
modernisation delivering four vessels by 2030.
Canadian Defence Minister Bill Blair conducted Operation
Nanook deploying CCGS Diefenbaker polar icebreaker. Danish Defence Minister
Troels Lund Poulsen upgraded Knud Rasmussen-class patrol ships. Finnish Arctic
Command established permanent Sodankylä radar station monitoring regional activities.
Davos investment commitments sustainable infrastructure
pledges
Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter witnessed $3 trillion
sustainable infrastructure pledges during opening ceremony. UAE President
Mohamed bin Zayed launched $100 billion climate resilience fund for vulnerable
countries. Saudi Public Investment Fund committed $50 billion to European green
hydrogen co-development projects.
Qatar Investment Authority invested $30 billion in EU
digital infrastructure equity positions. Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund
reallocated $15 billion from fossil fuels to renewables expansion. Singapore
Prime Minister Lawrence Wong initiated ASEAN-EU connectivity corridor financing
$200 billion rail networks.