NATO, Greenland
Digest more
U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest threats against Greenland pose a new and potentially unprecedented challenge to NATO, perhaps even an existential one
The Trump administration has repeatedly said the U.S. should be in control of Greenland, which is part of Denmark and NATO.
Top Trump aide Stephen Miller says it's the "formal position" of the White House that Denmark's territory of Greenland "should be part of the U.S."
Defence was the thread running through the questions from the Conservative leader. Kemi Badenoch began by welcoming the PM's efforts on Ukraine, but suggested he has shown a "fundamental lack of respect" to the Commons by not making a statement immediately. Starmer committed to making a statement on Ukraine at "the earliest opportunity"
Canadian leaders reportedly plan Greenland visit in February amid growing international tensions over President Donald Trump's annexation comments.
17hon MSNOpinion
The Greenland Crisis Could Break NATO
U.S. annexation would undo the transatlantic alliance, and cause irreparable damage to the E.U., writes Mujtaba Rahman.
As global power shifts, BRICS and NATO highlight contrasting strengths - NATO’s edge lies in military cohesion, while BRICS wields influence through population scale, economic growth and its push for a multipolar world order.
A Ukrainian F-16 pilot said the initial tactics taught by NATO were based on wars that were "fundamentally different" from Ukraine's fight.