Greenland, Trump and Europe
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Iran, Trump
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The story shown Sunday included statements from the White House and DHS that weren't part of what correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi had used before her story was pulled.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller asserted on Saturday that under “the law,” nations were not entitled to their territory if they were unable to defend it. The Trump aide belittled the Danish government, saying its “tiny” military was failing to adequately protect Greenland.
The prime minister also tells the US president that security in the Arctic remains a priority "for all Nato allies".
The EU's Anti-Coercion Instrument could limit access to public tenders in the bloc or restrict trade in services in which the U.S. has a surplus with the EU.
The troops have not yet been ordered to deploy, but the move signals a potentially more harder-line approach by the White House after President Donald Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to quell growing protests in Minneapolis.
The Pentagon has put some active-duty troops on prepare-to-deploy orders in case the president seeks to send them to Minnesota, according to two U.S. officials.
Thousands marched in Greenland wearing "Make America Go Away" hats, rejecting Trump's purchase demands and tariff threats saying, "We are not interested in being Americans."