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Trump’s jibes are wearing thin for many of Europe’s leaders

Nick BeakeEurope correspondent, Davos

AFP via Getty Images Close up shot of Donald Trump speaking into a microphone in front of a board with the words AFP via Getty Images

“Without us, right now you’d all be speaking German,” President Donald Trump told his audience at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss Alps on Wednesday.

He may well have forgotten German is the most widely spoken of the four official languages in Switzerland.

Many people – from Brussels to Berlin to Paris – will have found his speech to be insulting, overbearing and inaccurate.

In it, he presented the idea that Europe is careering down the wrong path. That is a theme Trump has frequently explored, but it has a different impact when delivered on European soil to the faces of supposed friends and allies.

There is undoubtedly huge relief across Europe that the US president ruled out the use of military force to take Greenland at the forum in Davos.

But, even if he keeps his word, the fundamental problem remains that he wants a piece of land the owners say is not for sale.

“What is quite clear after this speech is that the president’s ambition remains intact,” Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen told reporters in Copenhagen.

He said Trump’s comments about the military were “positive in isolation”.

Thousands of miles from Davos in Nuuk, the Greenlandic capital, government officials unveiled a new brochure giving advice to residents about what to do if there were a “crisis” in the territory.

Self-Sufficiency Minister Peter Borg said the document was “an insurance policy”. He said Greenland’s government did not expect to have to use it.

Crucially, there was no suggestion in Trump’s speech of any climb down on his current threat to hit the eight European countries – he deems to be most guilty of thwarting his Arctic ambitions – with new tariffs.

The proposed 10% taxes that are due to kick in from 1 February did not get a mention.

Any hope in Europe that President Trump would take the sting out of this transatlantic crisis was smashed as he began to outline his uncompromising argument for taking the island.

He ignored the European insistence that Greenland is sovereign EU territory and framed its acquisition as a perfectly reasonable transaction given the military support the US had provided the continent for decades.

Trump insisted the US had been wrong to “give back” Greenland after securing it during World War Two.

Greenland has never been part of the United States.

EPA/Shutterstock People walk along an icy street in Nuuk, Greenland's capital. A sign on the street says: EPA/Shutterstock

Trump returned to his familiar refrain that the European members of Nato had done nothing for the US.

He disparaged Denmark in particular when recalling how in 1940 it “fell to Germany after just six hours of fighting and was totally unable to defend either itself or Greenland”.

Trump’s military history lesson failed to recall the Danes were a key partner of the US-led invasion of Afghanistan and paid a heavy price.

Denmark lost 44 soldiers, proportionately more than any other ally apart from the US. They also lost personnel alongside US forces in Iraq.

Many other Nato allies supported the US after the 9/11 attacks in 2001.

It was French President Emmanuel Macron who was singled out for the most jibes.

He was mocked for his appearance in sunglasses on Tuesday – he had an eye problem – and his “tough” talking at the podium.

Trump insisted he liked Macron, before continuing: “Hard to believe, isn’t it?”

But the whole joke is wearing thin for many European leaders.

They have spent a year trying to flatter, impress and appease the US president and in return have been presented with their biggest threat to date.

The European Union meets on Thursday in Brussels for an emergency summit, with top European politicians having chosen to reach for their toughest language yet in response to US policy.

Reuters France's President Emmanuel Macron wears sunglasses as he attends the Davos economic forumReuters

The ball is now in the European court – do they ramp up the rhetoric around counter-tariffs and on rolling out the EU’s “trade bazooka”?

Or do they keep their powder dry and wait until 1 February to see if Trump actually follows through on his latest threat?

At the start of his one hour and 12 minute meandering address, President Trump boasted that at home “people are very happy with me”.

After this latest extraordinary round of Trump democracy, it is a sentiment much harder to find in the Europe the president claims to love so much.

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