The rules are what they've always been, the Canon Law.
"He who has the cannon makes the law."
U.S. President Donald Trump says he is backing down on his threat to impose tariffs on European countries over his demand to annex Greenland, after reaching what he called a “framework of a future deal” on the island with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte???
Noticing that 1 Danish krone is equal to 0.16 U.S. dollar.
If he sweetened the pot to par value with the U.S. dollar, it's something that could make a difference to Greenlanders.
If….if Greenland was for sale, which it’s not.

Earlier in a speech to the World Economic Forum, Mr. Trump ruled out taking Greenland by force but said he wanted to immediately start negotiations to purchase the Arctic island, which is a semi-autonomous territory of Denmark.
“We probably won’t get anything unless I decide to use excessive strength and force, where we would be, frankly, unstoppable. But I won’t do that, okay? Now everyone’s saying ‘oh, good,’” the President said.
“That’s probably the biggest statement I made, because people thought I would use force. I don’t have to use force, I don’t want to use force, I won’t use force.”
He added ominously: “They have a choice. You can say ‘yes’ and we will be very appreciative, or you can say ‘no’ and we will remember.”
President announces a ‘framework of a future deal’ after discussions with NATO Secretary-General
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There were no details about what Mr. Trump and Mr. Rutte had agreed to, or what kind of compromise had been reached over the island’s future. A NATO spokesperson said the framework focuses on Arctic security through allies and that negotiations between the U.S., Denmark and Greenland will ensure that Russia and China never gain a foothold in Greenland, economically or militarily.
Denmark’s Foreign Minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, said it is “positive that it is being said that military force will not be used. But it does not make this matter go away.”
Mr. Rasmussen made it clear that the Danish government
was not going to negotiate the sale of Greenland, which isn’t for sale, but he said it was open to discussing increased Arctic security through NATO. “We do not start any negotiations on the basis that we give up on basic principles. We will never get to that,” he told reporters.
EU leaders plan to still go ahead with an emergency summit on Thursday to discuss Greenland. In comments earlier on Wednesday, António Costa, who heads the European Council, which represents leaders from the 27 member states, said the EU stood ready “to defend ourselves, our member states, our citizens, our companies, against any form of coercion.”
“And the European Union has the power and the tools to do so,” he added.
"Without us, right now you'd all be speaking German," President Donald Trump told his audience at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss Alps on Wednesday.
He may well have forgotten (or never known) German is the most widely spoken of the four official languages in Switzerland.
Many people – from Brussels to Berlin to Paris – will have found his speech to be insulting, overbearing and inaccurate.
Anyway, Greenland, even if Trump keeps his word, the fundamental problem remains that he wants a piece of land the owners say is not for sale.
The ball is in the court of European leaders ahead of Thursday's emergency EU meeting in Brussels, writes Nick Beake.
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The U.S. president offered few details, but the deal was likely to fall far short of the full sovereign possession that he previously demanded. Denmark’s top diplomat said that the United States would not “own” the island, and Rutte is not empowered to negotiate the transfer of territory from one NATO member to another.
The announcement was the latest head-spinning twist in his effort to seize Greenland from Denmark despite Danish and Greenlandic objections that the island is not for sale.
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The address underscored a defining feature of Trump’s second term: a willingness to wield U.S. power coercively — through threats, tariffs and leverage — even against allies, while showing little interest in persuasion or consensus-building. Rather than tailoring his message to an event created to foster international collaboration, Trump delivered a speech that rebuked alliances that have defined U.S. foreign policy for generations and derided Europe’s economic policies.
He spoke for more than an hour, weaving from the economy to nostalgia for the age of European imperialism and the backlash to his immigration crackdown in Minnesota during his second speech in as many days defending policies that have struggled to gain traction at home and abroad.
The fallout was swift. Shortly after his remarks concluded, the European Parliament suspended ratification of the E.U.-U.S. trade deal that Trump reached last year. In a statement, Bernd Lange, chair of the legislative trade committee, said
U.S. threats against Denmark and Greenland left lawmakers no choice.
“By threatening the territorial integrity and sovereignty of an E.U. member state and by using tariffs as a coercive instrument, the U.S. is undermining the stability and predictability of E.U.-U.S. trade relations.”
Nato chief Mark Rutte says there is ‘a lot of work to be done’, as some Danish MPs voice concern at Greenland apparently being sidelined in US president’s talks
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