US and Europe
The whole situation, with suggestions that the United States wants to own Greenland, are really rattling people on both sides of the Atlantic. You've seen people speaking out in Congress, you've seen US public support is really against this idea. And in NATO terms this is completely unheard of that one NATO ally would essentially threaten to take the territory of another. Overnight we saw a bipartisan group of US Congress members put forward legislation to try to prevent that and essentially forbid the United States invading the territory of another NATO ally. It's kind of unbelievable that they felt they had to go there, but honestly that's the world we're living in...I assess the likelihood of the United States taking Greenland by military force or annexation as extremely low. Trump is first and foremost a businessman. The way you get your way in business is by setting a pretty high bar and engaging in brinksmanship. That doesn't always work as well on the foreign policy stage...I think this is why it's so important that the Danes and the Greenlanders went to Washington to be very clear on their position and to set some red lines."

