Zürcher Nachrichten - Danish, Greenland PMs to meet after Trump climbdown

EUR -
AED 4.300203
AFN 74.938572
ALL 96.041824
AMD 440.335601
AOA 1073.732152
ARS 1618.20269
AUD 1.652941
AWG 2.109117
AZN 1.993097
BAM 1.959689
BBD 2.355404
BDT 143.665101
BHD 0.441752
BIF 3477.628441
BMD 1.170919
BND 1.491673
BOB 8.081071
BRL 5.969695
BSD 1.169436
BTN 108.298692
BWP 15.752462
BYN 3.396728
BYR 22950.005873
BZD 2.352028
CAD 1.617747
CDF 2693.113378
CHF 0.924212
CLF 0.026507
CLP 1043.276762
CNY 7.999541
CNH 7.996099
COP 4279.180814
CRC 543.683573
CUC 1.170919
CUP 31.029345
CVE 110.653743
CZK 24.369218
DJF 208.095247
DKK 7.47198
DOP 70.694254
DZD 154.85044
EGP 62.162664
ERN 17.56378
ETB 182.610326
FJD 2.617825
FKP 0.871255
GBP 0.870935
GEL 3.143845
GGP 0.871255
GHS 12.897675
GIP 0.871255
GMD 86.647589
GNF 10274.811269
GTQ 8.946793
GYD 244.666581
HKD 9.172936
HNL 31.056028
HRK 7.530413
HTG 153.375681
HUF 376.450941
IDR 19978.15575
ILS 3.59168
IMP 0.871255
INR 108.144291
IQD 1532.059972
IRR 1540928.966161
ISK 143.390335
JEP 0.871255
JMD 184.899298
JOD 0.83016
JPY 185.98931
KES 151.341119
KGS 102.395079
KHR 4698.314584
KMF 492.956886
KPW 1053.77309
KRW 1726.853334
KWD 0.36172
KYD 0.974546
KZT 557.663818
LAK 25719.228214
LBP 104855.766899
LKR 368.996995
LRD 215.741321
LSL 19.120863
LTL 3.457419
LVL 0.708277
LYD 7.441183
MAD 10.886411
MDL 20.196597
MGA 4885.758288
MKD 61.571829
MMK 2458.671744
MNT 4186.327475
MOP 9.437049
MRU 46.848138
MUR 54.541673
MVR 18.09026
MWK 2033.885779
MXN 20.32545
MYR 4.663756
MZN 74.880462
NAD 19.121726
NGN 1594.967147
NIO 43.035955
NOK 11.11278
NPR 173.276083
NZD 1.997008
OMR 0.45022
PAB 1.169426
PEN 3.948922
PGK 5.062111
PHP 69.869835
PKR 326.715558
PLN 4.246956
PYG 7555.089723
QAR 4.269287
RON 5.092088
RSD 117.350666
RUB 90.89371
RWF 1711.297632
SAR 4.394135
SBD 9.424151
SCR 16.91011
SDG 703.721648
SEK 10.848322
SGD 1.489631
SLE 28.814898
SOS 669.175265
SRD 43.997851
STD 24235.652331
STN 24.549032
SVC 10.232437
SYP 129.449539
SZL 19.121524
THB 37.452967
TJS 11.127425
TMT 4.098215
TND 3.410282
TRY 52.163724
TTD 7.932844
TWD 37.1825
TZS 3038.533661
UAH 50.796656
UGX 4309.570668
USD 1.170919
UYU 47.464395
UZS 14267.496362
VES 555.503604
VND 30824.433908
VUV 139.965426
WST 3.242616
XAF 657.26976
XAG 0.015377
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.164466
XCG 2.10771
XDR 0.817433
XOF 657.26976
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.351899
ZAR 19.154181
ZMK 10539.675023
ZMW 22.307555
ZWL 377.035333
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.59

    +0.4%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    22.39

    +0.45%

  • BCC

    1.3500

    80.58

    +1.68%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    12.98

    +1%

  • RYCEF

    1.9500

    17.2

    +11.34%

  • NGG

    0.3600

    90.32

    +0.4%

  • RIO

    -1.3200

    97.13

    -1.36%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.89

    -0.96%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.85

    +0.5%

  • RELX

    -0.5900

    33.34

    -1.77%

  • GSK

    0.9900

    58.36

    +1.7%

  • AZN

    0.7200

    204.99

    +0.35%

  • BTI

    -1.1000

    58.85

    -1.87%

  • BP

    0.0100

    45.9

    +0.02%

Danish, Greenland PMs to meet after Trump climbdown
Danish, Greenland PMs to meet after Trump climbdown / Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND - AFP/File

Danish, Greenland PMs to meet after Trump climbdown

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen will on Friday hold talks with her Greenlandic counterpart after a turbulent week that saw US President Donald Trump back down from his threats to seize the Arctic island and agree to talks.

Text size:

Frederiksen will travel Friday to the Greenland capital Nuuk from Brussels, where she held talks early with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, who reached a purported deal with Trump on Greenland in Davos this week.

Rutte and Frederiksen agreed on Friday the alliance should boost security in the Arctic.

"Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen is traveling today from Brussels to Nuuk to meet with the Chair of the Naalakkersuisut, Jens-Frederik Nielsen," the Danish PM's office said on X.

Trump climbed down from his threats on Wednesday after agreeing with Rutte on a "framework" for the Danish autonomous territory.

The details remain scant but Trump said the United States "gets everything we wanted" and would be in force "forever".

A source familiar with the talks told AFP the United States and Denmark will renegotiate a 1951 defence pact on Greenland.

The agreement, updated in 2004, already gives Washington carte blanche to ramp up troop deployments provided it informs the authorities in Denmark and Greenland in advance.

Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen, who, together with his Greenlandic counterpart held talks in Washington on January 14 with US Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, stressed Friday there had been no formal, detailed plan hammered out between Trump and Rutte.

Rather there "was a framework for a future agreement", whereby, "instead of those drastic ideas about needing to own Greenland... (Trump) now wishes to negotiate a solution", Lokke said.

- Talks to start soon -

Lokke said those negotiations would start soon.

"There was a meeting in Washington yesterday where it was reconfirmed that this is what we should do, and a plan was set for how we do it," he said.

"We will get those meetings started fairly quickly. We will not communicate when those meetings are, because what is needed now is to take the drama out of this."

The talks would focus on "security, security, and security", he added.

Denmark and Greenland have stressed that sovereignty and territorial integrity would be a "red line" in the talks.

On Thursday, Greenland Prime Minister Nielsen said he was not aware of the contents of the Trump-Rutte agreement, but stressed no deal could be made without involving Nuuk.

"Nobody else than Greenland and the Kingdom of Denmark have the mandate to make deals or agreements," he told reporters.

Frederiksen has repeatedly said the same thing.

- Warming ties -

A Danish colony for three centuries, Greenland, which has around 57,000 inhabitants, gradually gained autonomy in the second half of the 20th century and obtained self-rule in 2009.

But Denmark's assimilation policies -- including de facto bans on the Inuit language and forced sterilisations -- have left Greenlanders bitter and angry.

While an overwhelming majority of the island's inhabitants support a decades-long drive for full independence, Trump's threats over the past year have led to a warming of ties between Denmark and Greenland.

"Greenlanders still have a lot of grievances concerning Denmark's lack of ability to reconsider its colonial past," Ulrik Pram Gad, a researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies, told AFP.

"But Trump's pressure has prompted the wide majority of the (Greenlandic) political spectrum... to put the independence preparations -- always a long-term project -- aside for now," he said.

Meanwhile, Denmark's public broadcaster DR on Friday reported that Danish troops deployed to Greenland were ordered to be armed and ready to fight in case of a military attack from the United States.

M.Hug--NZN