President Donald Trump says he has made a major diplomatic win with a “framework of a deal” on Greenland. But European diplomats don’t believe it at all. European governments and diplomats in Washington are both relieved and frustrated by this whole situation.
It ended with the president’s recent trip to the Swiss Alps. If you’re wondering whether the US is about to own the huge Arctic island, the answer is no. There is no actual framework of a deal yet, despite what Trump claims.
This whole thing appears to be a planned exit strategy. According to Sky News, one diplomat close to the situation said the president needed a way to back down after realizing his plans to take control of Greenland were impossible. When asked, “Is this just Trump’s off-ramp? No actual framework of a deal yet?” the diplomat replied, “Exactly.”
This looks like a classic move to let Trump change direction without admitting he lost
The day in Davos was chaotic, even for President Trump. He made three sudden changes in just 24 hours. He backed away from his threat of military action, dropped the threat of tariffs on European allies, and gave up on taking control of Greenland. It seems reality finally set in: his ownership plans were unpopular at home, even among his own political allies, and were seen worldwide as self-defeating and impossible to achieve.
Team Trump is trying to spin this as another example of the president’s “art of the deal” working. But this is hurting the relationship between America and Europe. It’s part showmanship and part incompetence, and it makes America look less trustworthy. The president has been making controversial moves on the international stage, including his plans to replace the UN.
The real situation is much less dramatic than Trump’s social media posts suggest. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte met with the president in Davos and repeated the positions of Denmark and Greenland. They discussed commitments from the 1951 US-Denmark treaty, and European nations promised again to increase their defense of Greenland.
Just last week, European nations sent senior military officials to Greenland to fulfill these commitments. President Trump saw this as a threat against him, which led to his tariff threat. Officials are clearly tired of the president’s behavior. One European ambassador said over the weekend, “I’m so bored of this now…” This comes amid other controversial Trump responses, including how he addressed a recent tragedy.
We’re basically back where we were last week. The Danish and Greenland foreign ministers had already agreed to form a “working group” to address American security concerns without giving up sovereignty. All President Trump really agreed to recently was naming the American members for that working group. Both sides will now look for a solution that doesn’t involve the US taking over the territory.
The most likely option is an arrangement similar to UK military bases in Cyprus. New US military bases could be built in empty parts of Greenland through a lease or sale agreement. These bases would become American territory, but Greenland would keep its sovereignty.
Published: Jan 22, 2026 02:17 pm