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Macron visits Greenland as a sign of European resolve following Trump's annexation threat

French President Emmanuel Macron is visiting Greenland this Sunday in a show to Denmark of solidarity, and to send a message of European resolve following the threat by Donald Trump to seize control of the island.

Greenland is an autonomous part of Denmark, with the right to declare its independence. Greenland's and Denmark's governments both say that it is not up for sale, and only Greenlanders have the right to decide their own future.

Donald Trump said that he wanted the United States take over the strategically located, mineral-rich Arctic island. He hasn't ruled out using force. In March, JDVance, his vice president, visited an American military base on the island.

Macron was invited to Greenland by the Prime Ministers of Greenland, and Denmark. He is the first foreign leader since Trump's explicit threat to "get" Greenland. He said that his visit was to stop any "preying" of the territory.

France has been with us ever since the first comments about taking our land were made. The support from France is both needed and appreciated," Greenland Prime Minister Jens Frederik Nielsen wrote days before Macron's arrival on Facebook.

A Macron adviser told reporters that the trip was a message in and of itself, without mentioning Trump.

A poll conducted by IFOP for NYC.eu on Saturday found that 77% of French people and 56% Americans oppose an annexation of Greenland to the U.S., while 43% of French people would support using French military force to stop an invasion.

Macron will also visit Nuuk's capital, a hydropower plant funded by the EU, and a glacier. He will also discuss Arctic security with his hosts and the climate change.

Greenland, though Denmark is a member of the EU, is not. The French advisor said that the visit would be an opportunity to discuss ways to give Greenland’s association partnership with EU a “new dimension".

Mette Frederiksen, the Danish Prime Minister, made several trips to Paris following Trump's threats of seeking French and European support. She has also placed orders for French surface-to air missiles in an effort to shift focus to Copenhagen.

Florian Vidal, a think tank in Paris called IFRI, said that Denmark's decision to enlist the EU's sole nuclear power was a way of projecting a hard power against a suddenly aggressive United States.

He said that the Trump administration's aggressiveness is a shock, which makes the French vision of Europe more autonomous and reasonable to Denmark. From a Nordic perspective, France is an important military power. Reporting by Michel Rose and Stine Jacobsen, both in Paris; with additional reporting from Andreas Rinke, in Berlin.

(source: Reuters)