Trump, Europe and Greenland
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The dispute between the United States and Europe over the future of Greenland isn't the first time the allies have been at loggerheads.
The answer to Trump’s fascistic policy of “might makes right” is not European rearmament but the international mobilization of the working class against all imperialist warmongers.
European leaders hit back at U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement that he would impose sanctions on nations that deployed military forces to Greenland last week.
Almost everywhere, attitudes to Brussels tend to harden the further right you go on the political spectrum. Waugh Jr bucked that rule, seeing Europe as a potential fortress against American cultural influence and other modern barbarities.
As President Trump tries to coerce European leaders over Greenland, they are pondering the unthinkable: Is an 80-year-old alliance doomed?
Transatlantic relations aren't broken, though they are damaged. And if Europeans want to try to cut through with Trump, they'll have to stick together, writes Katya Adler
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The United States expects its European allies to take on a much greater burden of conventional deterrence in Europe as the continent faces a threat from a belligerent and revanchist Russia. If Europe is to succeed, it must dramatically scale up its own ...