Denmark, Greenland and Trump
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Denmark deploys additional troops to Greenland after President Donald Trump claims the island is not secure from Russia or China.
The past year has been marked by ebbing and flowing of tensions in Europe and Canada over the U.S.'s commitment to NATO.
In Trump’s message, sent Jan. 18, he said, "Why (does Denmark) have a ‘right of ownership’ anyway? There are no written documents, it’s only that a boat landed there hundreds of years ago, but we had boats landing there, also."
Denmark's prime minister said she won't negotiate her nation's sovereignty after President Donald Trump said a "framework" on a Greenland deal was reached.
A framework is now in place for investigating the "potentials and risks" of new nuclear technologies - including small modular reactors - and the lifting of a moratorium on nuclear power, Denmark's Ministry of Climate,
MILAN — A recent $610 million order placed by Denmark for air surveillance radars to be stationed across Danish territory was sole-sourced to U.S. defense giant Lockheed Martin in the “essential security interests” of the country, according to newly published contract documents.
Born out of the silence during Nazi occupation, a 1952 Danish military order removes hesitation from defence. Denmark built it to ensure that no soldier would ever again lose the country while waiting
Greenland’s connection to Denmark stretches back hundreds of years and reflects layers of settlement and colonial rule. Norse settlers from Iceland arrived around 985 A.D., but their communities later vanished,