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Trump Links Greenland Threats to Nobel Peace Prize Snub

bloomberg.com

125 points by mikaelmello 12 days ago · 77 comments

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throw0101d 12 days ago

For the record, in 1917 the US bought the then Danish West Indies and made them the United States Virgin Islands and gave up Greenland:

> During 1916, the two sides agreed to a sale price of $25,000,000, and the United States accepted a Danish demand for a declaration stating that they would "not object to the Danish Government extending their political and economic interests to the whole of Greenland".[12][18] Although it had a claim on northern Greenland based on explorations by Charles Francis Hall[19] and Robert Peary, the United States decided that the purchase was more important, especially because of the nearby Panama Canal.[20] Historian Bo Lidegaard questions the utility of such a declaration, as the country had never disputed Danish sovereignty.[12]

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_the_Danish_West_Indi...

See:

> In proceeding this day to the signature of the Convention respecting the cession of the Danish West-Indian Islands to the United States of America, the undersigned Secretary of State of the United States of America, duly authorized by his Government, has the honor to declare that the Government of the United States of America will not object to the Danish Government extending their political and economic interests to the whole of Greenland.

* https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1917/d881

Hamuko 12 days ago

I’m beginning to think that the prestigious FIFA Peace Prize was given out to the wrong person.

  • cosmicgadget 12 days ago

    Imagine where we'd be if he didn't get it! Sending bigly-worded letters to the CEO of Switzerland threatening an invasion of the Azores.

  • tjpnz 12 days ago

    You're being downvoted because people think you're serious.

skeledrew 12 days ago

Excellent rhetoric there. Kid isn't given candy, throws a tantrum.

Jordan-117 12 days ago

The full text of the letter CC'd by Trump directly to multiple European governments:

"Dear [Norwegian PM] Jonas:

Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America. Denmark cannot protect that land from Russia or China, and why do they have a "right of ownership" anyway? There are no written documents, it's only that a boat landed there hundreds of years ago, but we had boats landing there, also. I have done more for NATO than any other person since its founding, and now, NATO should do something for the United States. The World is not secure unless we have Complete and Total Control of Greenland.

Thank you! President DJT"

  • thrance 11 days ago

    We really should share his writings/speeches more. The sanewashing of his mad ramblings or Truth social posts is omnipresent in media. Once you notice it, you see it everywhere.

    • Jordan-117 11 days ago

      I was pretty disgusted by the headline Axios used for it:

      >Trump defiant as NATO rages over Greenland "blackmail" tariffs

      https://archive.is/kFeae

      Didn't even mention the absurdly juvenile, ahistorical "boats" argument. Ofc, Axios is the height of access journalism, so not really surprising.

  • yongjik 11 days ago

    You know what, I kind of like this letter... as an educative example.

    After Trump, this should be a required reading for every American student in their American history class. The letter is short, the premise is stupid, and the way it's written is stupider: middle school kids can write better than this.

    A distilled example of the insanity of our time, and the cowardice of people who let this happen.

  • tim333 11 days ago

    The "no written documents" is nonsense.

    >the 1951 Defense of Greenland Agreement with Denmark, the US unambiguously recognizes ‘the sovereignty of the Kingdom of Denmark’ over Greenland. https://www.chathamhouse.org/2026/01/who-owns-greenland

    Maybe Trump doesn't realise that?

ZeroGravitas 12 days ago

This cause a real flutter of activity in Washington as multiple top aides rushed to game out different scenarios and decide how to use their limited influence over Trump to maximize their polymarket winnings betting on the exact date that NATO collapses.

alpineman 12 days ago

Embarrassing

krapp 12 days ago

But just imagine how bad things would be right now if Kamala got in.

We really dodged a bullet there, huh?

  • scarecrowbob 12 days ago

    I mean, the liberals would all be at brunch, at least. I suppose it's "better" when the mask of destructive empires is firmly in place, because at least then they have to maintain some decorum when mass deporting folks.

    It does kind of suck, though, when you're in Ferguson, Occupy, at Standing Rock, protesting the second Iraq war, in the streets because the police murdered another of your fellow humans, because the folks who think all this started on Oct. 7 or Jan 20 will tell you that you're just being hyperbolic and that you should accept all this violence done in your name.

    So, I dunno. I'm not stoked about being in an actual insurrectionist moment- I'd rather just be playing music. I'm not at all happy about being in a house I despise while it burns down. But having read at least one or two books, it feels like, I dunno, folks who were actively stoked about Harris don't want -less- violence, they just want it done to folks they don't see...

    • krapp 11 days ago

      >But having read at least one or two books, it feels like, I dunno, folks who were actively stoked about Harris don't want -less- violence, they just want it done to folks they don't see...

      The thing is you're choosing the violence of American imperialism to be done in your name either way.

      And yes, the people who wanted Harris did actually want less violence, and would have gotten less violence. I know it's comforting and cathartic to demonize them and consider them more ignorant than you because it makes your decision seem more righteous. Harris voters were making the best decision they could with the choices they actually had, to not throw all of their allies (including Palestinians, mind you) under the bus and double down on accelerating fascism for the sake of a moral victory.

      But hey, whatever helps you sleep at night. It's not as if it matters now, you all got what you wanted.

      • scarecrowbob 11 days ago

        Hoss, if you'd written "a grilled cheese sandwich would be a better president than DT" I would have just agreed with you out of hand.

        However, given the fact that a) the Democrats seemed to have done literally everything that they could do to lose what they called the "most important election of our lifetimes" and b) I have neither control over who they choose to run nor a vote in a contestable state, I am not going to feel bad for my real anger at them and the folks who support them for failing the rest of us so badly.

        The "choices they actually had" are the product of the Democratic party, and I feel no end of anger for them chosing as they did and failing to win.

        A lot of us just wanted to see them win, which should have been no problem. I'd much rather not be going to stand in front of an ICE detnetion facility every week.

        At the same time, you can pretend that Harris was for a less violent world. She was not, she was for a world order that targeted its violence at folks you don't care about.

        I sleep just fine. We have been organizing a long time and will continue.

pogue 12 days ago

What an absolute embarrassment to be American at this time. We have the most vain & corrupt president that only cares for his personal gain. It's unfortunate he's in control of the largest military in history. I don't know how horrible it must be for the people of Greenland right now, but as an American I would like to apologize to Europe and other nations right now and to let you know that while probably a large majority of Americans disagree with our leadership, there is not much we can do in a police state against our current circumstances. Our elected leaders on the opposition side are weak and spineless and still trying to comprehend that their ideas of how our democracy presently operates are no longer valid if they are merely ignored by the executive branch.

Now is definingly the time to disengage from America as an ally, as unfortunate as that is. The voting populace has been fed decades of bad education, a media of nationalistic propaganda and finds itself in the same position many pre-authoritarian nation states have found themselves in prior to great conflicts - brainwashed, lied to, but mostly apathetic about the situation.

I hope in 2028 we're able to vote ourselves out of this mess, but just the mere fact that all of this can happen without repercussion should make it evident that it's just a matter of time before someone else takes Trump's examples and puts them back into practice another four to eight years after that.

  • throw0101d 12 days ago

    Have you contacted your Representative about drawing up articles of impeachment?

    Have you contacted your Senator about voting to convict on impeachment?

    Have you donated and/or volunteered to Democratic party efforts for the mid-terms?

  • UncleMeat 12 days ago

    I hope in 2028 the electeds take a different path than Biden did in his administration. Currently, dem leadership seems to think this ends with them just getting elected. But it doesn't. Just taking power back and pretending that everything is normal again won't do it.

    We need meaningful punishments for the people committing crimes within the Trump administration and we need systems in place to prevent this sort of thing from happening again.

    • jeppester 12 days ago

      The US has to limit the power of the president and to remove the "the winner takes it all" principle from its "democracy".

      Maybe the next election is the right moment to do something about it. I can't believe there will be a time where it's more obvious that the system is broken - other than after it's too late.

      • thunky 11 days ago

        I agree wholeheartedly but there's zero chance they make changes that limit their own power. After all, predecessors from both parties got us to where we are now.

  • alpineman 12 days ago

    Agree, except I disagree that there is not much you can do.

    You write "there is not much we can do in a police state against our current circumstances" and then you state "Our elected leaders on the opposition side are weak and spineless".

    I would argue it's not just elected leaders that are being weak at the moment. Civil society too.

    • netsharc 11 days ago

      It's like saying sanctions will make N. Koreans or Russians rebel against their governments, and then wondering why none of them has done so, "are they cowards?". As if rebelling is so simple and not a life-changing thing...

      • ivell 11 days ago

        There is a small window of opportunity to make this right. That window will be gone soon and then we would be in the N. Korean situation. Rebellion must be done early and enthusiastically. Each passing month makes it more and more difficult, in part due to boiling frog situation.

      • alpineman 11 days ago

        You don't live in North Korea, not even anywhere close. If you don't want to live in a state like North Korea, you need to use the democratic means you still have to make your voice heard. I am tired of this lazy defeatism

        • netsharc 11 days ago

          Luckily since USA is close to N. Korea your statement holds true. Glad to be not American.

          Curiously enough if you do a survey of who of Kim Jong-Un and Donald Trump would be more likely to throw a world-threatening tantrum.. I don't think Kim Jong-Un is going to win that survey.

      • testing22321 11 days ago

        Your life is already changing in drastic ways that will be very bad for your life.

        Do want want to have a day in those changes and maybe shape their direction, or sit back and just let it happen?

  • aebtebeten 12 days ago

    Have you called your members of congress yet?

    • gsf_emergency_6 12 days ago
      • aebtebeten 12 days ago

        > Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) predicted [a Greenland war powers bill] would easily pass if an invasion was imminent

        I wonder what "imminent" might mean to Tillis? Anchorage to Nuuk is only ~5 hours by air (Newburgh to Nuuk, ~3h15).

        (using https://nuclearsecrecy.com/missilemap/ for distances and assuming ~900 km/h for a C-17 — although it would require multiple C-17s [which Anchorage has] to significantly outnumber the allied OOB [per wikipedia])

        ----

        the standard bureaucrats' response to crises, according to Sir Humphrey Appleby GCB KBE MVO:

          - Nothing is going to happen.
          - Something may be about to happen, but we should do nothing about it.
          - Maybe we should do something about it, but there's nothing we can do.
          - Maybe there was something we could have done, but it's too late now.
        
        EDIT: we also know Tillis can be less than completely candid; see https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46551849
        • gsf_emergency_6 12 days ago

          Ah! Having randos call congressmen is generally a great idea for urgent+important+bipartisan issues (tech or fiscal), which at the moment I can think of 3

          a)AI (in particular, regulation on the mil/statedept use of "private AI").

          b)independence of the fed

          c)tariffs

          Imho

    • oenton 11 days ago

      Yes and despite how demoralizing it can feel, I encourage everyone to do the same: https://www.congress.gov/members/find-your-member

      In the past we have hit critical mass, where so many people were calling in to Congress to complain (when Trump initially started with his arbitrary tariffs) that the Congressional phone system began to fail under load, and that made headlines that managed to break through the 24/7 firehose of bullshit.

AnimalMuppet 12 days ago

Another discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46679194

Currently 11 comments. This one's bigger, but not hugely so.

gizajob 12 days ago

Another day, another step closer to O.N.A.N. - Organisation of North American Nations - as predicted by David Foster Wallace in Infinite Jest.

DFW, Neal Stephenson, and Idiocracy seemed funny 25 years ago. Not so much now that they seem to have predicted where we have arrived.

  • throw0101d 12 days ago

    > DFW, Neal Stephenson, and Idiocracy seemed funny 25 years ago. Not so much now that they seem to have predicted where we have arrived.

    Idiocracy did not predict things accurately: in that movie the President acknowledges that he does not have all the answers and asks questions (and listens) to people he recognizes as knowing more from him. That is not the situation currently.

    • gizajob 12 days ago

      True. Didn’t predict the president building a Ba’al room for Moloch worship into the White House either.

    • sillyfluke 12 days ago

      I have to go back to the source and confirm your analysis. The sheer mental incapacity of the individual cabinet members in the movie most closely matches this current administration than any other cabinet in history as I recall.

      Edit: maybe it's predicting the presidency a couple of terms down the line, when a well-meaning Theo Von becomes president. But the Theo Von of today is too smart already, it would have to be the Theo Vom of a decade ago.

      • senordevnyc 11 days ago

        Theo Von has many dozens of characteristics that make him much better suited to be president than Trump

JumpinJack_Cash 12 days ago

Can some EU country leader (ideally Macron/Denmark PM) punch him in the face in Davos and then claim that it's just a personal matter and not an issue between countries to avoid legal ramifications?

Surely a broken jaw would prove quite the challenge for an 80 year old to recover from and fist fight on personal matter grounds would not constitute an attack on the U.S. henceforth not endangering NATO

  • nullocator 11 days ago

    Donald Trump or a flunky would likely order the secret service to shoot the PM and then they would.

tsoukase 11 days ago

At this point I only suggest patience for 3 more years and hope for the best. And the new government takes steps to severely reduce the irrational powers of POTUS so as to prevent such non sense to happen again. Oh, and to welcome aboard all us tourists that don't dare to visit the US now.

  • seper8 11 days ago

    Wow thanks for that amazing suggestion. Of course we will be patient while your president threatens our allies with war!

A_D_E_P_T 12 days ago

At this point they should really do away with the peace prize, or dramatically change how it's granted.

As things stand, it's frequently a complete debacle. (Of course in 2025, but see also, e.g., Abiy Ahmed.) Or an embarrassment. (Too many examples to list.)

They ought to either cancel the thing outright, or invert the usual Nobel Prize rule and only award the peace prize posthumously. That would solve every problem.

  • Jordan-117 12 days ago

    A local PTA has a "parent of the month" award.

    One month, a vain, vindictive, mentally unstable, and heavily armed parent who tirelessly lobbied for the award and lost begins physically threatening and menacing their neighbors, declaring that if they won't be recognized as the best parent, then by god they'll just take what they're owed until they feel they've gotten what is "psychologically needed for success."

    In that scenario, I don't think focusing on reform of the office politics and favoritism of the PTA award is the most productive use of time.

    • andsoitis 12 days ago

      What's the point of the Parent of the Month award?

    • A_D_E_P_T 12 days ago

      This analogy would work if 2025 were an isolated incident. But the award has been a joke for a very long time, if not actively harmful, and recent events make such a mockery of its founding premises that it's simply too much to bear. What if the "parent of the month" award were perpetually mired in controversy? I think it would be fair to reconsider the thing.

      • lovich 11 days ago

        How is it actively harmful?

        If I don’t get what I want from an event can I just make it controversial by yelling all the time to close it down?

        You’re arguing that everyone should just give up to muggers

  • gizajob 12 days ago

    I think Obama winning the prize just for winning the election while being black was a very poor precedent to set.

    • fifilura 12 days ago

      The Obama prize was a problem that haunts the committee. I agree

      But you are simplifying greatly. He got it because he reached out to Arabic leader to lower the tone set by George "crusader" Bush.

      "The Norwegian Nobel Committee announced the award on October 9, 2009, citing Obama's promotion of nuclear nonproliferation[2] and a "new climate" in international relations fostered by Obama, especially in reaching out to the Muslim world."

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Nobel_Peace_Prize

      Either way. Stating that you don't care about world peace because you didn't receive a prize. It is a bit childish. I would not let guy near something that requires responsibility. You win some you lose some. Get on with life.

    • rjrjrjrj 12 days ago

      I think the US electing a convicted criminal as President was a very poor precedent to set.

    • moogly 12 days ago

      Henry Kissinger though?

  • adamtulinius 12 days ago

    Who "they"?

    The problem here is that Trump believes that the Norwegian government has any say in what a private organisation is doing, and - to be frank - just shows that Trump is a tyrant who wants everyone to use illegal force to please him.

    • testing22321 11 days ago

      It gives good insight into how trump thinks of his own power in the US.

      “I do whatever the fuck I want. I say jump, people ask how high. People do what I say”

      He expects the same of other leaders in other countries.

    • A_D_E_P_T 12 days ago

      They would be The Norwegian Nobel Committee, who at this point should realize what a disaster their prize has been, and not only last year. It was inherently poorly conceived, and shouldn't be awarded to the living, who can and do go on to wage war, agitate social instability, and act against the interests of peace.

      • gizajob 12 days ago

        Having a situation where a president demands the peace prize otherwise he causes a war isn’t a good look for Nobel, and shows that we’ve now moved so far from the original intention of the prize that the peace component really should be scrapped.

        • s_trumpet 12 days ago

          The brink of world war 3 over fucking goodhart’s law.

          We are not a serious species.

          • gizajob 12 days ago

            When combined with the Peter principle, it doesn’t make for great progress, no.

        • oenton 11 days ago

          > isn’t a good look for Nobel, and shows that we’ve now moved so far from the original intention of the prize that the peace component really should be scrapped.

          I don't follow. Are you saying the committee should have known that Trump would literally wage a military war if he isn't awarded the peace prize? Are you saying if they changed their mind now and allowed Venezuelan politician Machado to gift her prize to Trump, that Trump would no longer have a desire to own Greenland? I'm honestly trying to understand but maybe I missed an important story.

          • gizajob 10 days ago

            Well it should be apparent that Greenland is the sovereign territory of another NATO member, Denmark. Coming along like a transactional narcissist and claiming you “need it or else” and breaking nato over it OR you get the Nobel peace prize for not capturing it.

        • A_D_E_P_T 12 days ago

          Right! Either scrap it, or award it only to (A) those recently deceased who have devoted their lives to making peace, or (B) defunct organizations who have completed their mission and had operated in the interests of peace.

          Giving a "peace" award to living people/organizations -- who can and do go on to sully the award with most unpeaceful deeds -- is a proven failure.

          • fifilura 12 days ago

            The thing is, they don't "need" to do anything.

            This is the prize.

            If people find it irrelevant it will become irrelevant.

            The committee didn't ask for the US president to put so much relevance into it.

            He got the FIFA peace prize. It would be better if he valued that prize higher.

            You have to ask yourself. Why is it important for you that they change?

          • throw0101d 12 days ago

            > Right! Either scrap it, or award it only to (A) those recently deceased who have devoted their lives to making peace, or (B) defunct organizations who have completed their mission and had operated in the interests of peace.

            The legal trust for all the Nobel Prizes state (AIUI) that they can only be awarded to living persons.

            The only option would be to not award it (like happened in 1948).

            • andsoitis 12 days ago

              > The legal trust for all the Nobel Prizes state (AIUI) that they can only be awarded to living persons.

              Can the Nobel Foundation change their rules? Or is static, forever set in stone? In a complex world, you need to be able to adapt.

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