← NewsAll
Starmer and European leaders say they will defend Greenland's territorial integrity
Summary
Sir Keir Starmer and several European leaders said they will defend Greenland's territorial integrity after comments by US president Donald Trump about seizing the territory; Denmark's prime minister warned that a forced takeover would undermine NATO.
Content
Sir Keir Starmer and a group of European leaders issued a joint statement saying they will defend Greenland's territorial integrity. The statement followed remarks by US president Donald Trump about the possibility of taking over Greenland. The leaders described the United States as an essential NATO partner while stressing that Greenland's future should be decided by Denmark and Greenland alone. Denmark's prime minister warned that a forced takeover of Greenland would undermine the NATO alliance.
Key facts:
- Sir Keir Starmer and leaders from France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain and Denmark said they would uphold Greenland's territorial integrity.
- The leaders said Arctic security should be addressed collectively and in line with the UN Charter, and they referred to the US as an essential NATO partner.
- Denmark's prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, warned that any military seizure of Greenland would mean the end of NATO's mutual-defence assurances.
- Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the UK and NATO were increasing support for Denmark and that Greenland contributes to the alliance's collective security.
Summary:
The statements reaffirmed allied support for Denmark and Greenland and framed Arctic security as a collective NATO priority. Undetermined at this time.
