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Denmark is ready to defend "every inch" of NATO, including the Danish Kingdom, says PM

Mette Frederiksen, Danish Prime Minister, said that Denmark was'ready to defend all of NATO, including the Kingdom of Denmark. This came a day after Donald Trump, U.S. president, reiterated the U.S. position that Greenland belonged under U.S. control.

Greenland's prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielson also rejected Trump remarks on Wednesday. Trump's statements that the U.S. should control or acquire Greenland - a semiautonomous Danish territory - have caused tensions between Washington and Copenhagen - both founding members in NATO – and more broadly, U.S. relations with Europe. Negotiations are underway.

Frederiksen reiterated that Greenland is not for sale, and said "we are prepared to defend every inch of NATO, including our territory."

She said: "One of many reasons we built NATO years ago was that if something happened to one of us, everyone should stand up for the other." Greenland's Nielsen responded to Trump's latest claim on Facebook, writing: "Repeated requests for the control or takeover of our country will not change that." Greenland is not for sale, he said. Lars Lokke Rasmussen, Danish Foreign Minister, told journalists in Ankara separately that Denmark is still engaged in diplomatic negotiations with Greenland as well as the U.S. The result of these talks is yet to be announced.

Rasmussen stated that "we have an agreement with the U.S. Administration that we will try to find a solution within the frameworks of the Kingdom's red lines that addresses also the U.S. 'legitimate security interests."

"Because these interests?exist and we share them and we are responding to them,"? he said. Rasmussen stated that he was "firmly" convinced that it is possible to achieve a deal which would satisfy Greenland and Denmark, as well as the United States, by expanding a 1951 U.S. - Danish defence?agreement, that allows Washington wide military access?to Arctic island.

Nielsen stated in May that the talks included increasing the U.S. presence in the Arctic. Reporting by Louise Rasmussen, Essi Lehto and Hugh Lawson; editing by Jacqueline Wong Philippa Fletcher

(source: Reuters)