Trump during a Tuesday press conference declined to
rule out using military force to gain control of Greenland and the Panama
Canal.
He said he would use economic force to merge
the United States with Canada, shrugging off the border between the countries
as an “artificial line.”
He threatened to tariff Denmark at “a very high level” if it
did not relinquish control of Greenland, the autonomous territory home to
valuable minerals.
As he spoke, Donald Trump Jr. was in Greenland
where he was joined by influential conservative activist Charlie
Kirk and two members of the incoming Trump administration - Sergio Gor, who
will head the Presidential Personnel Office, and James Blair, who will serve as
a deputy chief of staff.
Chris LaCivita, who co-managed the senior Trump’s 2024
campaign, quipped that the group amounted to a “Landing Team” in Greenland.
A source familiar said Trump Jr. did not meet with any
Greenland government official and was there to film content for an upcoming
podcast, but he posed for photos with Greenlanders clad in red “Make America
Great Again” hats.
Trump
has long used bombastic rhetoric as a negotiating and posturing tool, and the
same is likely the case here, particularly when it comes to threats of military
force. Greenland is an autonomous territory of Denmark, which is a NATO member.
Using military force against a NATO member would create chaos and confusion
among allies.
Annexing
Canada as the 51st state is also unlikely to come to pass. But Trump’s constant
belittling of the neighbor to the north is likely intended to bring Canadian
leaders to heel as he threatens tariffs and seeks to renegotiate the US-Mexico-Canada
Agreement that was brokered during Trump’s first term.
Trump’s rhetoric also has the benefit of giving fodder to
his supporters, who have embraced his view of American exceptionalism and
dominance abroad and relish seeing liberals overreact to what the
president-elect is saying.
It was in that spirit that Trump declared Tuesday that he
would soon seek to rename the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.”
Numerous Trump allies cheered the idea on social media — “I
am SO HERE FOR THIS,” former Rep. Matt Gaetz wrote — and Rep. Marjorie
Taylor Greene quickly announced she would introduce legislation to make the
change official on government maps.
The idea of an imperialist second Trump term has ruffled
feathers abroad.
Danish
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said Tuesday that Greenland “is not
for sale and will not be in the future either.”
Canadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday there “isn’t a snowball’s
chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States.”
His
potential replacement, Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre, has said
Canada “will never be the 51st state of the US”
Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino previously rejected
Trump’s suggestion of the U.S. taking over the canal, which was built in the
early 1900s and handed over to Panama as part of a 1977 treaty.
But Trump has not been one to take kindly to public
rejection or embarrassment from other world leaders, and the pushback could
only embolden him to inflict economic pain on those leaders.
Kirk, responding to Trudeau on social media, wrote to the
Canadian prime minister: “When you’re playing defense, you’re already losing!”
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