France urges EU retaliation in response to Donald Trump’s threat over Greenland

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France’s Emmanuel Macron has called for the EU to activate its most potent trade weapon against the US after President Donald Trump threatened to hit several European countries with extra tariffs in response to the dispute over Greenland.
Trump on Saturday said the US would apply an additional 10 per cent levy on goods from France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland from February 1, marking an abrupt escalation in tensions between the US and its allies over Trump’s ambitions to own Greenland. The tariffs would rise to 25 per cent in June if no resolution was found, Trump said in a Truth Social post.
His outburst over Greenland signals the deepest rift among Nato allies since the alliance’s foundation and has prompted angry reactions from European leaders and business executives who have previously been more measured for fear of losing US support for Ukraine.
An Élysée official said on Sunday that the French president would request that the EU activates its so-called anti-coercion instrument that can restrict access to the single market for American companies.
“He will be in contact throughout the day with his European counterparts and will request, on France’s behalf, the activation of the anti-coercion instrument,” said an Élysée official.

First adopted in 2023, the tool has never been used but allows the EU to respond to instances of “economic coercion” by other countries — such as punitive tariffs — with its own retaliatory measures.
Several other leaders and business executives echoed Macron’s sentiments, although a senior EU diplomat said that many were still hesitant to activate the instrument.
EU ambassadors are set to meet on Sunday afternoon in Brussels to discuss next steps.
Germany’s vice-chancellor and finance minister Lars Klingbeil said that “a line had been crossed” by Trump’s latest move, adding that the eight affected nations “must not allow ourselves to be blackmailed”.
“There will be a European response to this threat and to yesterday’s announcement,” he said.
“I’m genuinely upset about it, and I think it is unacceptable to hit countries that are now taking more responsibility for our common security in Nato,” said Troels Lund Poulsen, Denmark’s defence minister, who will meet Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte on Monday.
Lars Løkke Rasmussen, Denmark’s foreign minister, said that the tariff move was “surprising” because he had had a “constructive dialogue” with vice-president JD Vance only on Wednesday. He added: “It is paradoxical because what makes the president react is that we are doing what we are criticised for not doing: namely taking care of the Arctic. That makes it difficult to get a handle on.”
Alexander Stubb, president of Finland, who is known to have a good personal relationship with Trump, said that “tariffs would undermine the transatlantic relationship and risk a dangerous downward spiral”.
The Swedish and Norwegian premiers Ulf Kristersson and Jonas Gahr Støre also warned that Europe “will not allow ourselves to be blackmailed”.
The bloc has yet to ratify a trade deal it agreed with the US last summer that would hold tariffs at 15 per cent. Lawmakers in the European parliament on Saturday said they would delay approval because of the Greenland threat.
EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič told the German news outlet DW on Sunday that the implementation of the US-EU deal would be “very complicated” in light of Trump’s threats.
Bertram Kawlath, president of the German machine makers’ association the VDMA, said that Europe “must not allow itself to be blackmailed — not even by the United States”, adding that the European parliament “cannot possibly” go ahead with ratifying the US-EU trade deal while Washington was putting the bloc under pressure with new punitive tariffs.
He also called for Brussels to consider use of the anti-coercion mechanism, despite the machine-parts industry suffering heavily from tariffs already in place.
Hildegard Müller, president of the German carmakers lobby the VDA, said that the cost of the additional tariffs would be “enormous for German and European industry — in already challenging times”.
She called for a “smart, strategic response from Brussels”, adding: “Hasty decisions lead to escalation and a potential spiral that only produces losers.”

“It’s almost unbelievable. In my opinion, it appears to be completely nonsensical,” said Harald Solberg, head of the Federation of Norwegian Industries, of Trump’s threats.
The increasing strains in the transatlantic relationship have heaped pressure on Italian premier Giorgia Meloni, who has forged a close bond with Trump and acted as a conduit for the bloc with the White House.
Speaking to reporters in Seoul, Meloni said she had spoken to Trump on Sunday morning as well as Rutte, to try to defuse tension between the US and Europe over Greenland.
“The imposition of increased tariffs on countries that had decided to contribute to the security of Greenland is, according to me, a mistake,” said the Italian premier. “I think it’s very important at this stage to talk to each other and avoid an escalation.”
Italy will not be hit directly by the additional tariffs as it did not join the military mission to Greenland to bolster the Arctic island’s security.
But the Italian economy will suffer from tariffs on Germany, one of its largest trading partners, to which it sends many intermediate goods used in German exports.
Meloni said the White House may have misunderstood the recent visit to Greenland by defence personnel of some European countries — and had not realised that it was not directed against the US but against potentially hostile manoeuvres by powers such as Russia and China.
“It seems to me this could have been a problem of comprehension and communication, which is why I continue to insist on the role of Nato as the forum in which we should try to look to organise instruments of deterrence,” Meloni said.
Only one country that sent military personnel was not included in Trump’s threats. Belgium was not targeted although it will send one military officer to Greenland.
“If Nato members decided on an operation in Greenland, it is precisely to demonstrate that we are all preoccupied about Arctic security,” Belgian foreign minister Maxime Prévot wrote on X.
Additional reporting by Laura Pitel in Berlin and Henry Foy and Laura Dubois in Brussels
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