TRUMP RENEWS CALL FOR US TO TAKE OVER GREENLAND AS HE ARRIVES FOR NATO SUMMIT.
By Guardian - Pippa Crerar - Political editor - Tue 7 Jul 2026 20.02 BST
Trump renews call for US to take over Greenland as he arrives for Nato summit. Donald Trump has revived his bid for the US to acquire Greenland, threatening to pull all American armed forces out of Europe after the continent repeatedly pushed back.President also threatens to pull all American troops from Europe and rails against NATO stance on Iran war.

Arriving at the Nato summit in Ankara on Tuesday, the US president also suggested his commitment to defending Europe had been tempered by political decisions by leaders on immigration and energy.
Keir Starmer and European allies have been determined to avoid another public bust-up with Trump over defence spending after a bruising year for Nato, in which the Iran war once again exposed cracks in the alliance.
The UK has already pushed back on criticism from the US that some allies are âlagging behindâ on funding, with Trump expected to rebuke countries, including the UK, for not making enough progress on hitting the target of spending 3.5% of GDP by 2035.
As Trump arrived in Turkey, he suggested that Starmerâs decision to keep out of the war against Iran had contributed to his downfall, whereas the prime ministerâs stance had in fact been popular with the British public.
âI was very disappointed with Nato. We werenât treated well because we did something in Iran. We donât need anybodyâs help, but before I asked they said they wouldnât be there,â the US president told reporters.
âIn the case of the United Kingdom, the prime minister, I guess heâs no longer there, maybe because of this, it was a very unpopular thing he did. He said: âNo, weâll help after the war is over.â I said: âWe donât need that kind of help.ââ
Reviving an earlier row, Trump also suggested that the disagreement about the ownership of Greenland â which is part of Denmark, a fellow Nato member â had âhurtâ his relationship with the military alliance.
âDenmark doesnât spend money to really help Greenland, but itâs an important part for the US, and itâs surrounded by China ships and Russian ships ⌠[It] should be controlled by the US, not by Denmark. And when they wouldnât go along with it, and with all the money we spend to help them with Russia,â he said.

âWe donât have to spend any money; we could remove all of our soldiers out of Europe because, as you probably noticed, Europeâs a very different place than it was 20 years ago ⌠they better be careful with immigration and energy. If theyâre not careful with those two things, youâre not going to have a Europe any more.â
In response, Rachel Reeves, the UK chancellor, told reporters: âThe future of Greenland is up to the people of Greenland and of Denmark, and not up to the US president. Iâve been very clear about that ever since it was first suggested.â
Trump also renewed his criticism that Nato allies do not spend enough on defence and are too reliant on the US â an argument European members are attempting to meet head-on by announcing multi-billion-pound defence collaborations.
âWhy are we spending hundreds of billions of dollars and theyâre not there for us? Weâve always been there for them,â he said, although Natoâs mutual defence clause has only ever been triggered after the September 11 attacks on New York, where allies joined US troops in Afghanistan.
As Labour struggles to fund a steep increase in defence spending to meet Nato targets, Reeves suggested for the first time that the âmultilateral defence mechanismâ of off-balance sheet financing could be merged with Canadaâs Defence, Security and Resilience Bank initiative.
Supporters argue the Canadian-led scheme, which was supported by John Healey when he was defence secretary but opposed by the Treasury, would give the UK access to a bank with ÂŁ86bn of lending capability for defence projects, for a UK subscription of ÂŁ900m.
