Donald Trump on Wednesday accused Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen of being
‘nasty’ when she said his plan to buy Greenland was ‘absurd.’
The president told reporters on the South lawn her statement on the
matter ‘was nasty’ during a 35-minute, free
wheeling exchange that included his thoughts on gun background
checks, Israel, the New York Times, China and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
His remarks came after Frederiksen said earlier Wednesday she was ‘surprised’ at Trump’s decision to cancel his two-day visit.
But her initial reaction on Monday – after the president publicly confirmed his interest in buying Greenland – was to call it
‘absurd.’
Frederiksen was in Greenland on Monday to visit her counter
part there when she said any talk of a sale was ‘an absurd discussion.’
Trump showed his anger at her use of the word.
‘I thought that the prime minister’s statement that it was absurd – that it was
an absurd idea – was nasty. I thought it was an inappropriate statement.
All she had to do is say no, we wouldn’t be interested,’ he said.
He repeatedly went back to her word ‘absurd’ when asked about American-Danish relations after officials refused to consider his offer to buy the world’s largest island – and
complained Frederiksen could not treat the U.S. that way.
‘She shouldn’t treat the United States that way. She said absurd.
That’s not the right word to use. Absurd,’ he said of Frederiksen’s reaction to but Greenland, which is an autonomous Danish territory.
‘I thought it was an inappropriate statement. All she had to do is say no,
we wouldn’t be interested,’ he added.
‘I thought it was a very not nice way of saying something.
They could have told me no,’ he said. ‘All they had to do is say,
no, we would rather not do that or we would rather not talk about it.
Don’t say what an absurd idea that is.’
He accused her of insulting the United States with her response.
‘She’s not talking to me,’ he said of Frederiksen. ‘She’s talking to the United States of
America. You don’t talk to the United States
that way. At least under me.’
‘I thought it was not a nice statement – the way she blew me off,’ he added later.
‘We’ve done a lot for Denmark.’
Donald Trump accused the Danish prime minister of being ‘nasty’ when she said his
plan to buy Greenland was ‘absurd’
Trump originally said Greenland was not the reason for his trip to Denmark
Trump also said he was not looking at purchasing land from other countries.
‘No,’ he said in response to a question from Dailymail.com.
‘Greenland was just an idea. Just a thought.
But I think when they say it was absurd and it was said in a very nasty, very sarcastic way, I said we’ll make it
some other time.’
‘I love Denmark. I’ve been to Denmark and, frankly, we’ll do it another time,
‘ he added. ‘Respect has to be shown to the United States.’
He also noted he was not the first president to bring up the idea of buying Greenland.
‘The prime minister used a terrible word when talking about something we’ve been talking about for years,’ he said.
‘This is something that has been discussed for many years.
Harry Truman had the idea of Greenland. I had
the idea. Other people have had the idea. It goes back into
the early 1900s. But Harry Truman very strongly thought it was a good idea.
I think it is a good idea because Denmark is losing $700 million a year with it.
It doesn’t do them any good,’ he noted.
Additionally, Republican Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas,
a close Trump ally on Capitol Hill, also is interested in purchasing Greenland.
Cotton raised the idea in August 2018 when Danish Ambassador Lone Dencker Wisborg dropped by his Senate office, The Atlantic reported.
Cotton also discussed the idea with Trump – although no time frame was given for when that
conversation took place.
After his angry rant at Frederiksen, Trump then took to Twitter to complain Denmark is not paying enough in its NATO fees.
Trump complained of the Danish prime minister’s calling his
idea ‘absurd’ and said Frederiksen could not treat the U.S.
that way
‘For the record, Denmark is only at 1.35% of GDP for NATO spending.
They are a wealthy country and should be at 2%.
We protect Europe and yet, only 8 of the 28 NATO countries are at the 2% mark.
The United States is at a much, much higher level than that,’ he wrote.
‘Because of me, these countries have agreed to pay ONE
HUNDRED BILLION DOLLARS more – but still way short of what they should
pay for the incredible military protection provided. Sorry!,’ he added.
Denmark agreed to raise its NATO contribution to 1.5 percent of
its gross domestic product in 2023, up from 1.35 percent it will pay this year, Danish officials
said in January.
Trump’s cancelation comes as Barack Obama has made his own plans to
visit Denmark.
The former president will be at the Musikkens Hus (Music House) in the northern city Aalborg on September 28
for ‘A Conversation with President Barack Obama.’ The invitation-only event will
be for business leaders but will also include around
two hundred students from Aalborg University, Ritzau,
a Danish news site.
The president has been vocal about his interest in obtaining
Greenland but Frederiksen slammed his scouting efforts as ‘absurd’, saying the
semi-autonomous island is not for sale.
The Danish prime minister also said she was ‘disappointed and surprised’ by Trump’s
decision to cancel his upcoming state visit.
Snubbed in his purchase offer, Trump, a former real
estate tycoon, decided to postpone his meeting with Frederiksen, which was scheduled to take place in two weeks, in a
dramatic last-minute decision announced on Twitter Tuesday night.
Queen Margrethe II and the royal household on Wednesday expressed surprise at the sudden cancellation, while other prominent Danish politicians described it
as ‘deeply insulting’.
Donald Trump has cancelled his upcoming meeting with Denmark’s Prime Minister
Mette Frederiksen because she refuses to talk about potentially selling Greenland
Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen giving a statement Wednesday on President Trump’s cancellation of his state visit in Copenhagen
Queen Margrethe II (pictured) and the Danish royal family were ‘surprised’
at Trump’s sudden cancellation of his state visit
Helle Thorning-Schmidt, a former Danish Prime Minister, wrote on Twitter that Trump’s cancellation was ‘deeply
insulting’
President Barack Obama, seen in Germany in April, will be in Denmark on September 28 to speak to business leaders and students
Trump’s visit was originally seen as a thank you to
the small northern European nation, which is a member of NATO and has supported the U.S.
military missions in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.
The country has seen 43 Danish troops members killed
in those U.S.-led missions, which is a large number for a country of 5.5 million not used to
participating in battle.
His cancellation has now sparked worries of a diplomatic row but Frederiksen argued
it would not harm relations between Copenhagen and Washington.
Frederiksen, who took office two months ago as Denmark’s second female head of
government and the leader of the left-leaning Social Democratic Party, said relations between Copenhagen and Washington ‘are not in any
crisis in my opinion’ after Trump canceled his plans to visit Denmark following her rejection of the sale.
‘I don’t believe that the cancellation should have any
influence on other matters,’ she said.
She also confirmed Wednesday that ‘a discussion about a potential sale of Greenland has been put forward.’
But she noted: ‘It has been rejected by Greenland Premier Kim Kielsen, and I fully
stand behind that rejection’.
The prime minister said she was ‘disappointed and surprised’ by Trump’s decision to cancel
his two-day stop in her country.
But she told reporters that ‘the invitation for a stronger strategic cooperation with the Americans in the Arctic
is still open’.
Former Danish government ministers were quick to speak out, with
ex-foreign minister and head of the foreign affairs committee in parliament,
Martin Lidegaard, telling Trump to ‘please stop’.
He added to Danish broadcaster TV2 that it was ‘a diplomatic farce’ and added that Trump’s behavior was ‘grotesque’ and he was ‘throwing a hissy fit’.
Helle Thorning-Schmidt, a former Danish Prime Minister,
wrote on Twitter that Trump’s cancellation was ‘deeply insulting to the people of Greenland and Denmark’.
The 811,000-square-mile island of icy terrain in the Atlantic
inhabits about 56,000 people, and though it is technically in North American waters, the self-governing land is culturally European
Greenland premier Kim Kielsen rejected a tentative US bid to buy the island.
Pictured is the town of Kulusuk in Greenland
Trump tweeted Tuesday evening that he would postpone the meeting, originally scheduled during
his September 2 and 3 state visit, ‘for another time’ because Frederiksen said Greenland was not for sale
While another ex-finance minister, Kristian Jensen, went further
describing it as ‘total chaos’ and adding: ‘This has gone from
a great opportunity for a strengthened dialogue between allies
to a diplomatic crisis.’
Lene Balleby, head of communications for the Danish royal
family, said: ‘It [the cancellation] was a surprise – we have nothing more to
say about this case.’
Frederiksen noted that preparations for the September 2 and 3 visit
were ‘well underway’.
‘It is with regret and surprise that I received the
news that President Trump has cancelled his state visit to Denmark on the second and third of
September,’ she said.
‘I had been looking forward to the visit, our preparations were well underway.
It was an opportunity, I think, to celebrate
Denmark’s close relationship to the US – who remains one of Denmark’s closest allies.
‘I was looking forward to having a dialogue on the many shared interests we have with the US.
‘Furthermore the development in the Arctic region called for further co-operation between the
US, Greenland, the Faroe Islands and Denmark. And therefore I would
like to underline our invitation for a stronger co-operation on Arctic affairs still stands.
Trump was prepared to take over Denmark’s annual $600 million subsidy to Greenland in perpetuity before he canceled his visit.
The president also had discussed giving Denmark a large one-time payment
as well to help move the transaction along, senior administration officials told The Washington Post.
Greenland handles its own domestic affairs but Denmark covers its national security and
foreign relations. The Danes also pay for 50 percent of the island’s
budget in direct subsidies with additional spending on defense.
In total, Denmark spends about $740 million annually on Greenland.
The US embassy in Copenhagen after President Trump postponed a planned visit to Denmark
The Helheim glacier in Greenland. President Trump announced his decision to postpone an early September visit to Denmark by tweet
A boat navigating at night next to icebergs in eastern Greenland, the world’s biggest island,
earlier this month
Frederiksen pointed out Greenland officials rejected the idea – a move she supported.
‘A discussion however has been raised about a potential sale of Greenland.
This has clearly been rejected by Kim Kielsen, a position that
I share of course,’ she said.
‘This does not change the character of our good relations and we will, of course, from Denmark continue an ongoing dialogue with the US on how we can develop our co-operation and deal with the many
common challenges we are facing.’
Trump was invited by Denmark’s Queen Margrethe II for a state
visit in Copenhagen in early September, which would have followed a stop
in Warsaw, Poland, where the president will take part in a series of
ceremonies in honor of the 80th anniversary of the start of World War II.
First lady Melania Trump was to have accompanied him and dinner with the Queen was
on the agenda.
The president initially claimed the visit wouldn’t be about a Greenland
purchase, his sudden cancellation has cast doubts on the intentions of his trip.
A senior official told DailyMail.com last
week that Trump was visiting Denmark because he was invited and not to purchase
Greenland.
The senior official said that reports on Trump’s
interest in buying the property were being ‘overblown,’ and the president was not entirely serious pursuing the sale.
However, Trump’s tweets challenged that.
‘Denmark is a very special country with incredible people, but based on Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s comments, that she would have no interest in discussing
the purchase of Greenland, I will be postponing our meeting scheduled in two weeks for another
time….’ the president wrote on Twitter Tuesday night.
‘The Prime Minister was able to save a great deal of expense and effort for
both the United States and Denmark by being so direct.
I thank her for that and look forward to rescheduling sometime in the future!’ he added, digging at Frederiksen for spurning his interest in buying the island.
President Donald Trump has likened buying Greenland
to ‘a large real estate deal’ after confirming interest in purchasing the world’s largest island
from Denmark. It comes after Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said Greenland was not for sale and the idea of selling it
to the U.S. was absurd on Sunday
His cancellation came just three hours after the US ambassador to Denmark tweeted:
‘Denmark is ready for the POTUS @realDonaldTrump
visit! Partner, ally, friend’ sharing a picture of a billboard emblazoned with Trump’s name
“Greenland is not for sale”: Denmark Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen reacts to Pres.
Trump’s idea of buying the semi-autonomous Danish territory
of Greenland.
“Thankfully, the time where you buy and sell other countries and populations is over,” she adds website pic.twitter.com/0a0wAGjPX8
— ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) August 19, 2019
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Donald Trump on Wednesday accused Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen of being
‘nasty’ when she said his plan to buy Greenland was ‘absurd.’
The president told reporters on the South lawn her statement on the
matter ‘was nasty’ during a 35-minute, free
wheeling exchange that included his thoughts on gun background
checks, Israel, the New York Times, China and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
His remarks came after Frederiksen said earlier Wednesday she was ‘surprised’ at Trump’s decision to cancel his two-day visit.
But her initial reaction on Monday – after the president publicly confirmed his interest in buying Greenland – was to call it
‘absurd.’
Frederiksen was in Greenland on Monday to visit her counter
part there when she said any talk of a sale was ‘an absurd discussion.’
Trump showed his anger at her use of the word.
‘I thought that the prime minister’s statement that it was absurd – that it was
an absurd idea – was nasty. I thought it was an inappropriate statement.
All she had to do is say no, we wouldn’t be interested,’ he said.
He repeatedly went back to her word ‘absurd’ when asked about American-Danish relations after officials refused to consider his offer to buy the world’s largest island – and
complained Frederiksen could not treat the U.S. that way.
‘She shouldn’t treat the United States that way. She said absurd.
That’s not the right word to use. Absurd,’ he said of Frederiksen’s reaction to but Greenland, which is an autonomous Danish territory.
‘I thought it was an inappropriate statement. All she had to do is say no,
we wouldn’t be interested,’ he added.
‘I thought it was a very not nice way of saying something.
They could have told me no,’ he said. ‘All they had to do is say,
no, we would rather not do that or we would rather not talk about it.
Don’t say what an absurd idea that is.’
He accused her of insulting the United States with her response.
‘She’s not talking to me,’ he said of Frederiksen. ‘She’s talking to the United States of
America. You don’t talk to the United States
that way. At least under me.’
‘I thought it was not a nice statement – the way she blew me off,’ he added later.
‘We’ve done a lot for Denmark.’
Donald Trump accused the Danish prime minister of being ‘nasty’ when she said his
plan to buy Greenland was ‘absurd’
Trump originally said Greenland was not the reason for his trip to Denmark
Trump also said he was not looking at purchasing land from other countries.
‘No,’ he said in response to a question from Dailymail.com.
‘Greenland was just an idea. Just a thought.
But I think when they say it was absurd and it was said in a very nasty, very sarcastic way, I said we’ll make it
some other time.’
‘I love Denmark. I’ve been to Denmark and, frankly, we’ll do it another time,
‘ he added. ‘Respect has to be shown to the United States.’
He also noted he was not the first president to bring up the idea of buying Greenland.
‘The prime minister used a terrible word when talking about something we’ve been talking about for years,’ he said.
‘This is something that has been discussed for many years.
Harry Truman had the idea of Greenland. I had
the idea. Other people have had the idea. It goes back into
the early 1900s. But Harry Truman very strongly thought it was a good idea.
I think it is a good idea because Denmark is losing $700 million a year with it.
It doesn’t do them any good,’ he noted.
Additionally, Republican Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas,
a close Trump ally on Capitol Hill, also is interested in purchasing Greenland.
Cotton raised the idea in August 2018 when Danish Ambassador Lone Dencker Wisborg dropped by his Senate office, The Atlantic reported.
Cotton also discussed the idea with Trump – although no time frame was given for when that
conversation took place.
After his angry rant at Frederiksen, Trump then took to Twitter to complain Denmark is not paying enough in its NATO fees.
Trump complained of the Danish prime minister’s calling his
idea ‘absurd’ and said Frederiksen could not treat the U.S.
that way
‘For the record, Denmark is only at 1.35% of GDP for NATO spending.
They are a wealthy country and should be at 2%.
We protect Europe and yet, only 8 of the 28 NATO countries are at the 2% mark.
The United States is at a much, much higher level than that,’ he wrote.
‘Because of me, these countries have agreed to pay ONE
HUNDRED BILLION DOLLARS more – but still way short of what they should
pay for the incredible military protection provided. Sorry!,’ he added.
Denmark agreed to raise its NATO contribution to 1.5 percent of
its gross domestic product in 2023, up from 1.35 percent it will pay this year, Danish officials
said in January.
Trump’s cancelation comes as Barack Obama has made his own plans to
visit Denmark.
The former president will be at the Musikkens Hus (Music House) in the northern city Aalborg on September 28
for ‘A Conversation with President Barack Obama.’ The invitation-only event will
be for business leaders but will also include around
two hundred students from Aalborg University, Ritzau,
a Danish news site.
The president has been vocal about his interest in obtaining
Greenland but Frederiksen slammed his scouting efforts as ‘absurd’, saying the
semi-autonomous island is not for sale.
The Danish prime minister also said she was ‘disappointed and surprised’ by Trump’s
decision to cancel his upcoming state visit.
Snubbed in his purchase offer, Trump, a former real
estate tycoon, decided to postpone his meeting with Frederiksen, which was scheduled to take place in two weeks, in a
dramatic last-minute decision announced on Twitter Tuesday night.
Queen Margrethe II and the royal household on Wednesday expressed surprise at the sudden cancellation, while other prominent Danish politicians described it
as ‘deeply insulting’.
Donald Trump has cancelled his upcoming meeting with Denmark’s Prime Minister
Mette Frederiksen because she refuses to talk about potentially selling Greenland
Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen giving a statement Wednesday on President Trump’s cancellation of his state visit in Copenhagen
Queen Margrethe II (pictured) and the Danish royal family were ‘surprised’
at Trump’s sudden cancellation of his state visit
Helle Thorning-Schmidt, a former Danish Prime Minister, wrote on Twitter that Trump’s cancellation was ‘deeply
insulting’
President Barack Obama, seen in Germany in April, will be in Denmark on September 28 to speak to business leaders and students
Trump’s visit was originally seen as a thank you to
the small northern European nation, which is a member of NATO and has supported the U.S.
military missions in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.
The country has seen 43 Danish troops members killed
in those U.S.-led missions, which is a large number for a country of 5.5 million not used to
participating in battle.
His cancellation has now sparked worries of a diplomatic row but Frederiksen argued
it would not harm relations between Copenhagen and Washington.
Frederiksen, who took office two months ago as Denmark’s second female head of
government and the leader of the left-leaning Social Democratic Party, said relations between Copenhagen and Washington ‘are not in any
crisis in my opinion’ after Trump canceled his plans to visit Denmark following her rejection of the sale.
‘I don’t believe that the cancellation should have any
influence on other matters,’ she said.
She also confirmed Wednesday that ‘a discussion about a potential sale of Greenland has been put forward.’
But she noted: ‘It has been rejected by Greenland Premier Kim Kielsen, and I fully
stand behind that rejection’.
The prime minister said she was ‘disappointed and surprised’ by Trump’s decision to cancel
his two-day stop in her country.
But she told reporters that ‘the invitation for a stronger strategic cooperation with the Americans in the Arctic
is still open’.
Former Danish government ministers were quick to speak out, with
ex-foreign minister and head of the foreign affairs committee in parliament,
Martin Lidegaard, telling Trump to ‘please stop’.
He added to Danish broadcaster TV2 that it was ‘a diplomatic farce’ and added that Trump’s behavior was ‘grotesque’ and he was ‘throwing a hissy fit’.
Helle Thorning-Schmidt, a former Danish Prime Minister,
wrote on Twitter that Trump’s cancellation was ‘deeply insulting to the people of Greenland and Denmark’.
The 811,000-square-mile island of icy terrain in the Atlantic
inhabits about 56,000 people, and though it is technically in North American waters, the self-governing land is culturally European
Greenland premier Kim Kielsen rejected a tentative US bid to buy the island.
Pictured is the town of Kulusuk in Greenland
Trump tweeted Tuesday evening that he would postpone the meeting, originally scheduled during
his September 2 and 3 state visit, ‘for another time’ because Frederiksen said Greenland was not for sale
While another ex-finance minister, Kristian Jensen, went further
describing it as ‘total chaos’ and adding: ‘This has gone from
a great opportunity for a strengthened dialogue between allies
to a diplomatic crisis.’
Lene Balleby, head of communications for the Danish royal
family, said: ‘It [the cancellation] was a surprise – we have nothing more to
say about this case.’
Frederiksen noted that preparations for the September 2 and 3 visit
were ‘well underway’.
‘It is with regret and surprise that I received the
news that President Trump has cancelled his state visit to Denmark on the second and third of
September,’ she said.
‘I had been looking forward to the visit, our preparations were well underway.
It was an opportunity, I think, to celebrate
Denmark’s close relationship to the US – who remains one of Denmark’s closest allies.
‘I was looking forward to having a dialogue on the many shared interests we have with the US.
‘Furthermore the development in the Arctic region called for further co-operation between the
US, Greenland, the Faroe Islands and Denmark. And therefore I would
like to underline our invitation for a stronger co-operation on Arctic affairs still stands.
Trump was prepared to take over Denmark’s annual $600 million subsidy to Greenland in perpetuity before he canceled his visit.
The president also had discussed giving Denmark a large one-time payment
as well to help move the transaction along, senior administration officials told The Washington Post.
Greenland handles its own domestic affairs but Denmark covers its national security and
foreign relations. The Danes also pay for 50 percent of the island’s
budget in direct subsidies with additional spending on defense.
In total, Denmark spends about $740 million annually on Greenland.
The US embassy in Copenhagen after President Trump postponed a planned visit to Denmark
The Helheim glacier in Greenland. President Trump announced his decision to postpone an early September visit to Denmark by tweet
A boat navigating at night next to icebergs in eastern Greenland, the world’s biggest island,
earlier this month
Frederiksen pointed out Greenland officials rejected the idea – a move she supported.
‘A discussion however has been raised about a potential sale of Greenland.
This has clearly been rejected by Kim Kielsen, a position that
I share of course,’ she said.
‘This does not change the character of our good relations and we will, of course, from Denmark continue an ongoing dialogue with the US on how we can develop our co-operation and deal with the many
common challenges we are facing.’
Trump was invited by Denmark’s Queen Margrethe II for a state
visit in Copenhagen in early September, which would have followed a stop
in Warsaw, Poland, where the president will take part in a series of
ceremonies in honor of the 80th anniversary of the start of World War II.
First lady Melania Trump was to have accompanied him and dinner with the Queen was
on the agenda.
The president initially claimed the visit wouldn’t be about a Greenland
purchase, his sudden cancellation has cast doubts on the intentions of his trip.
A senior official told DailyMail.com last
week that Trump was visiting Denmark because he was invited and not to purchase
Greenland.
The senior official said that reports on Trump’s
interest in buying the property were being ‘overblown,’ and the president was not entirely serious pursuing the sale.
However, Trump’s tweets challenged that.
‘Denmark is a very special country with incredible people, but based on Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s comments, that she would have no interest in discussing
the purchase of Greenland, I will be postponing our meeting scheduled in two weeks for another
time….’ the president wrote on Twitter Tuesday night.
‘The Prime Minister was able to save a great deal of expense and effort for
both the United States and Denmark by being so direct.
I thank her for that and look forward to rescheduling sometime in the future!’ he added, digging at Frederiksen for spurning his interest in buying the island.
President Donald Trump has likened buying Greenland
to ‘a large real estate deal’ after confirming interest in purchasing the world’s largest island
from Denmark. It comes after Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said Greenland was not for sale and the idea of selling it
to the U.S. was absurd on Sunday
His cancellation came just three hours after the US ambassador to Denmark tweeted:
‘Denmark is ready for the POTUS @realDonaldTrump
visit! Partner, ally, friend’ sharing a picture of a billboard emblazoned with Trump’s name
“Greenland is not for sale”: Denmark Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen reacts to Pres.
Trump’s idea of buying the semi-autonomous Danish territory
of Greenland.
“Thankfully, the time where you buy and sell other countries and populations is over,” she adds website pic.twitter.com/0a0wAGjPX8
— ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) August 19, 2019
Wonderful blog! Do you have any hints for aspiring writers?
I’m hoping to start my own blog soon but I’m a little lost on everything.
Would you suggest starting with a free platform like WordPress or
go for a paid option? There are so many choices out there that I’m completely confused ..
Any ideas? Kudos!
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