World Leaders Alarmed as Trump Arrives at Davos Under Fire Over Greenland and Tariff Threats
Tensions erupted at the World Economic Forum in Davos as President Donald Trump arrived facing unprecedented backlash from America’s closest allies. European leaders are openly questioning U.S. leadership after Trump escalated threats to impose sweeping tariffs and reiterated his controversial push to claim Greenland, a move many view as a direct challenge to international law and NATO unity.

The crisis intensified after Trump posted an AI-generated image depicting himself planting a U.S. flag in Greenland and declaring it American territory. Overnight, he further stunned diplomats by publicly sharing a private text message from French President Emmanuel Macron, who bluntly asked, “I do not understand what you are doing on Greenland.” The unprecedented disclosure of private communications sent shockwaves through Davos, where leaders are scrambling to prevent a diplomatic rupture.
Speaking at the forum, Macron delivered one of his harshest critiques yet of U.S. policy, warning that the world is sliding toward “a system without rules” where trade coercion and territorial pressure replace cooperation. He condemned the use of tariffs as leverage against sovereignty, calling such tactics fundamentally unacceptable and dangerous for global stability.
Behind the scenes, European officials are racing to contain the fallout. According to White House reporting, leaders are urgently seeking meetings with Trump to understand his true intentions and persuade him to step back from what they see as a reckless course. Macron has even floated the idea of an emergency G7 summit following Davos in an effort to defuse the situation.
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Former U.S. Ambassador to NATO Kurt Volker, speaking from Davos, said the confusion among allies is genuine and deep. He emphasized that Greenland is legally Danish territory and that existing treaties already allow the United States to establish any military presence it deems necessary. “Europeans are ready to help,” Volker said, “but insisting on ownership without defining a real security need makes no sense.”
Economic fears are compounding the diplomatic crisis. With Trump threatening tariffs of up to 25% on European goods, officials are openly discussing deploying the EU’s so-called “trade bazooka,” an anti-coercion mechanism that could trigger retaliatory embargoes on U.S. exports. Analysts warn this could ignite a full-scale trade war, disrupt global markets, and ultimately benefit China as Western allies fracture.
What troubles European leaders most is the broader message. Comments from Trump and senior aides suggesting a world governed by raw power rather than law have rattled a continent built on alliances and rules-based order. Trust in the United States, painstakingly built over decades, is eroding at an alarming pace.
As Trump prepares to address Davos, the stakes could not be higher. Allies fear that without a clear off-ramp, the combination of tariff threats and territorial ambition will push Europe toward a future where it must plan not with America, but around it. What was once unthinkable is now openly discussed in the Swiss Alps: a Western alliance struggling to contain instability originating from Washington itself.