US will not use force to gain Greenland, Trump tells Davos

Published January 21, 2026
US President Donald Trump speaks during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 21, 2026. — AFP
US President Donald Trump speaks during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 21, 2026. — AFP

US President Donald Trump ruled out the use of force in his bid to control Greenland on Wednesday, but said in a speech in Davos that no other country can secure the Danish territory.

“People thought I would use force, but I don’t have to use force,” Trump said at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Switzerland.

“I don’t want to use force. I won’t use force.”

Trump took a hectoring tone, chastising the United States’ European allies for their insolence, disloyalty and policy missteps in areas ranging from wind power and the environment to immigration and geopolitics.

Trump’s increasing threats to Europe over Greenland have frayed transatlantic ties and worried Europeans, overshadowing a speech that was intended to focus primarily on the US economy.

Calling Denmark “ungrateful,” the Republican US president played down the issue as a “small ask” over a “piece of ice” and that an acquisition would be no threat to the Nato alliance, which includes Denmark and the United States.

“No nation or group of nations is in any position to be able to secure Greenland other than the United States,” Trump said, adding: “I’m seeking immediate negotiations to once again to discuss the acquisition of Greenland by the United States.”

On several occasions during a speech that lasted more than an hour, Trump mistakenly referred to Greenland as Iceland.

Trump, who marked the end of a turbulent first year in office on Tuesday, is set to overshadow the agenda of the WEF, where global elites chew over economic and political trends.

Nato leaders have warned that Trump’s Greenland strategy could upend the alliance, while the leaders of Denmark and Greenland have offered a wide array of ways for a greater US presence on the strategic island territory of 57,000 people.

“We want a piece of ice for world protection, and they won’t give it,” Trump said in his speech to a packed congress hall.

Hundreds of delegates gathered in the lobby to listen or watch Trump’s speech on video monitors or on mobile phones. After an hour, most of them had tuned out and resumed chatting.

Greenland releases ‘crisis’ guidelines as Trump threat looms

Meanwhile, Greenland’s government on Wednesday unveiled a new brochure offering advice to the population in the event of a “crisis” in the territory.

Guidance includes stockpiling food and water, hunting weapons and ammunition.

The document is “an insurance policy”, said Self-Sufficiency Minister Peter Borg at a press conference in Nuuk, the Greenlandic capital.

“We don’t expect to have to use it,” Borg said.

Work on the brochure, titled ‘Prepared for Crises — Be Self-Sufficient for Five Days’, began last year “against a backdrop of power outages of varying duration”, according to the Greenland government.

The guidance recommends storing five days’ worth of food, three litres of water per person per day, toilet paper, a battery-powered radio, plus weapons, ammunition and fishing equipment.

Greenland’s 57,000-strong population — nearly 90 per cent indigenous Inuit people — has long traditions of hunting and fishing as the primary means of subsistence.

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