The British position on the US bid to acquire the Danish island is ânon-negotiable,â according to Culture Secretary Lisa NandyÂ
British Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has vowed that the UK government will not yield to pressure from US President Donald Trump, who has announced plans to impose trade tariffs on European countries that oppose his bid to acquire Greenland.
Trump claims US sovereignty over Greenland is necessary for national security and that Denmark and other European NATO members cannot defend it from a hypothetical Chinese or Russian takeover. The move has drawn varying degrees of criticism in Europe, where nations have accused Washington of undermining the military bloc.
âOur position on Greenland is non-negotiable. Weâve made that very clear. And weâll continue to make that clear,â Nandy told Sky News on Sunday, referring to an earlier statement by UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Starmer said the islandâs future âis a matter for the Greenlanders and the Danesâ to decide and that imposing tariffs on NATO states resisting Trumpâs aspirations is âcompletely wrong.â
Last week, several Western European and Nordic countries â including Germany, France, Sweden, Norway and the UK â sent between one and 15 troops to Greenland for a Danish-led military exercise. German personnel have already returned home, according to a military spokesperson.
The EU has also threatened to activate retaliatory measures that officials have called a âtrade bazookaâ in response to Trumpâs tariffs. The 10% US levy on imports from eight European nations, tied to the Greenland dispute, is set to take effect on February 1 and could rise to 25% by June 1.
Earlier this month, NATO members broadly supported the US abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, who many of Washingtonâs allies do not recognize as the legitimate leader of the country.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the situation with Greenland âextraordinary in terms of international lawâ but unsurprising, given Trumpâs open disregard for whether other nations view his actions as legal. Moscow is monitoring developments, he added.