NEWS
1. 🚨 “Go to Hell”: Denmark Just Issued Trump a Warning That Could Trigger World War III 👉 Read why NATO allies are now preparing for the unthinkable.
🚨Denmark’s Prime Minister suggests Trump can go to hell about Greenland and reminds him it would trigger World War III.
Denmark’s prime minister just drew a hard line against Donald Trump after he openly suggested the United States “needs” Greenland, sending shockwaves through Europe following the U.S. attack on Venezuela.
In a blistering public statement, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen shut Trump down in unmistakable terms, warning that his rhetoric has no legal basis and represents a direct threat to a close U.S. ally.
“I must say this very clearly to the United States,” Frederiksen said. “It makes absolutely no sense to speak of any necessity for the United States to take over Greenland.”
That is not diplomatic hedging. That is a firm rejection.
Frederiksen reminded Trump that Greenland is part of the Kingdom of Denmark and that neither Denmark nor Greenland has any intention of being bullied, bought, or seized.
“The United States has no legal basis to annex one of the three countries of the Kingdom of Denmark,” she stated. “The Kingdom of Denmark — and thus Greenland — is a member of NATO and is therefore covered by the Alliance’s collective security guarantee.”
That sentence matters.
Trump is now openly floating the idea of taking territory that is protected by NATO. Territory defended under the same collective security agreement the United States helped build and has relied on for decades. Any military action by the United States would plunge most of the European countries to war — AGAINST the United States.
Frederiksen also dismantled Trump’s predictable excuse that the U.S. somehow needs more access to Greenland for security reasons.
“We already have a defence agreement between the Kingdom of Denmark and the United States that grants the U.S. broad access to Greenland,” she said. “In addition, the Kingdom has made significant investments in security in the Arctic.”
Translation: the U.S. already has what it needs. This isn’t about defense.
It’s about power.
It’s about control.
And it’s coming on the heels of an illegal attack on Venezuela that has already drawn global condemnation and raised alarms about how far Trump is willing to go without Congress, without allies, and without regard for international law.
Frederiksen closed with a warning no American ally should ever have to issue.
“I therefore strongly urge the United States to cease its threats against a historically close ally, and against another country and another people who have stated very clearly that they are not for sale.”
Not for sale.
Not negotiable.
And not Trump’s to take.
After Venezuela, the world is no longer treating Trump’s words as bluster. Allies are taking him at face value — and preparing for the consequences.
The question now isn’t whether Trump is pushing dangerous boundaries.
It’s whether anyone in Washington is willing to stop him before those boundaries collapse entirely.