Europe, Greenland and Trump
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By Kate Abnett BRUSSELS, Jan 23 (Reuters) - European governments including Germany, Britain and Denmark will reinforce their plans to massively expand wind power projects on Monday, despite U.S. President Donald Trump stepping up criticism of their green energy agenda,
The dispute between the United States and Europe over the future of Greenland isn't the first time the allies have been at loggerheads.
The Ukrainian leader’s speech in Davos, Switzerland, was one of his most scathing critiques of his closest allies.
T HE EUROPEAN UNION and Mercosur, a bloc of South American countries, first started negotiating their trade deal last century. In 1999 Bill Clinton was in the White House, Boris Yeltsin was stumbling around the Kremlin and China had yet to join the World Trade Organisation.
Geographic confusion runs deep in the American psyche, especially when it comes to identifying which countries belong to which continent. Studies suggest that many Americans have limited knowledge about European geography and the European Union. Let me ...
The Greenland crisis has been averted—for now—and European leaders may have learned a key lesson in how to handle Trump.
Europe has options, but they are limited and will be difficult to co-ordinate. The 27 members of the European Union, plus Britain, Norway, Iceland and war-torn Ukraine, need a plan they can all live with.
As President Trump tries to coerce European leaders over Greenland, they are pondering the unthinkable: Is an 80-year-old alliance doomed?
Americans will have to pay for travel authorization to visit 30 European countries, starting from the fourth quarter of 2026.