• News
  • Film and TV
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Weird
  • Community
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
Greenland sends defiant message to Trump after president's latest threat to take over territory

Home> News> US News

Published 13:58 5 Jan 2026 GMT

Greenland sends defiant message to Trump after president's latest threat to take over territory

President Trump said he would begin discussing the future of Greenland in the coming weeks

William Morgan

William Morgan

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover
Featured Image Credit: Nicole Combeau/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Topics: Donald Trump, Greenland, Politics, World News, US News

William Morgan
William Morgan

Advert

Advert

Advert

The Prime Minister of Greenland has sent Donald Trump a defiant demand after the president made yet another threat to annex the Arctic country, which has a population of just 57,000 people.

President Trump threatened to take over the territory this week after launching a large-scale air attack on Venezuela and abducting its leader Nicolás Maduro from a safe house near Caracas.

He defended his unlawful action as a new version of the Monroe Doctrine, a 200-year-old piece of foreign policy agreed with the British Empire that placed the entirety of the continent of the Americas in the US' sphere of influence. Trump called his new version the 'Donroe Doctrine'.

Echoing this old philosophy, the president renewed his threat to annex the largely unpopulated landmass on Sunday, arguing to reporters that 'we need Greenland from the standpoint of national security'. But the country's PM Jens Frederik Nielsen has hit back and told Trump to 'stop the threats'.

Advert

The population of Greenland is 0.019 percent of the USA's, with just 57000 residents (Getty Images)
The population of Greenland is 0.019 percent of the USA's, with just 57000 residents (Getty Images)

The blowback came after Trump's most concerning comments yet about the sovereignty of the US' neighbors, also making threats to help topple the governments of Cuba, Mexico, and Colombia.

Of Greenland, Trump argued: “You know what Denmark did recently to boost up security in Greenland? They added one more dog sled. It's true. They thought that was a great move."

He even appeared to give a time scale for the annexation discussion, adding: "We'll worry about Greenland in about two months ... let's talk about Greenland in 20 days."

"That's enough now," Nielsen said in response to the threats on the autonomous Danish territory, which has been coveted by US expansionists since 1867, and was even occupied for several years by American troops during and after World War Two.

Nielsen acknowledged that his country's 'strategic location' made it reliant on US military support, which is guaranteed through the NATO alliance. "But alliances are built on trust. And trust requires respect," he said in a Facebook post to his 57,000 citizens.

Greenland is the largest island on Earth, but is barely inhabitable for most of the year (Getty Images)
Greenland is the largest island on Earth, but is barely inhabitable for most of the year (Getty Images)

"Threats, pressure and talk of annexation do not belong anywhere between friends. That's not how you talk to a people who have repeatedly shown responsibility, stability and loyalty.

This is enough."

President Trump has been making threats since 2019 to make a deal to acquire the autonomous territory, which has its own parliament and runs its own economy. Foreign policy and financial backing for Greenland is provided by the Kingdom of Denmark, with its citizens holding Danish passports.

"No more pressure. No more hints. No more fantasies about annexation," Nielsen demanded after Trump's latest comments. "Greenland is our home and our territory. And that's how it continues to be."

And it does not look like Denmark is backing down either over Greenland, sharing a history with the landmass that stretches back to the Viking era. "I have to say this very clearly to the United States: it is absolutely absurd to say that the United States should take control of Greenland," Danish PM Mette Frederiksen said over the weekend.

However, influential figures at the top of the administration seem to have their eyes firmly set on Greenland, with former aide and wife of Stephen Miller, Katie Miller, sharing a picture of Greenland draped in the US flag, with the caption, 'soon'.

Choose your content:

an hour ago
2 hours ago
  • @‌dr.boogie/TikTok
    an hour ago

    Simulation shows exactly what happens inside your body if you drink soda every day

    While tasty, too much soda is not good for your health

    News
  • MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images
    an hour ago

    Where the Lizzie McGuire cast are now as tributes pour in for 'dad' Robert Carradine

    The star, who played Sam McGuire in the series and movie, died on Monday February 23

    Celebrity
  • Bruce Bennett/Getty
    an hour ago

    US women’s hockey team praised for response to Trump after outrage over 'vile' comment to men’s squad

    Trump has been criticized for comments he made to the US men's hockey team on Sunday

    News
  • Hunter College
    2 hours ago

    College responds after professor caught on hot mic saying ‘blatantly racist’ comment about student

    The college is reviewing the 'abhorrent' comment 'under the university's applicable conduct and nondiscrimination policies'

    News
  • US military is 'always an option' for Trump to acquire Greenland, says White House in chilling threat
  • People shocked by Trump's 'poor excuse' as to why US needs to take over Greenland
  • Donald Trump backs down on tariff threat after 'securing beginnings' of a Greenland deal
  • Trump savagely trolled over his latest global tariff decision as other world leaders chime in