French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday a standoff with the United States over Greenland was “a strategic wake-up call for all of Europe” as he hosted the leaders of Denmark and the Danish autonomous territory for talks.
European powers have sought to join forces after US President Donald Trump roiled the transatlantic alliance by threatening to seize strategically-located and mineral-rich Greenland.
Speaking alongside the prime ministers of Denmark and Greenland, Mette Frederiksen and Jens-Frederik Nielsen, Macron said the “awakening” must focus “on asserting our European sovereignty, on our contribution to Arctic security, on the fight against foreign interference and disinformation, and on the fight against global warming.”
He reaffirmed to Frederiksen and Nielsen France’s solidarity and “its commitment to your sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
“France will continue to defend these principles in accordance with the United Nations Charter,” he added, expressing his support for increased NATO engagement in the Arctic.
“Greenland is not for sale, nor is it up for grabs. The Greenlanders will decide their own future,” Macron said in the indigenous Greenlandic language.
He then switched to Danish, telling the prime minister that France would “be side-by-side” with the “Kingdom of Denmark”.
In a gesture of solidarity, a modest number of military personnel were deployed to Greenland this month by a handful of European countries including France.
After European pushback, Trump backed down on the threat to take Greenland, which is located between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic Ocean, by military force.











