
War, Money, and Power: How Brussels Is Using Ukraine and Greenland
Behind the language of solidarity, new EU loans are reshaping defence spending, debt, and decision-making—often without much public scrutiny.

Behind the language of solidarity, new EU loans are reshaping defence spending, debt, and decision-making—often without much public scrutiny.

Greenland’s leader says U.S. proposals are “disrespectful,” but Trump maintains he will take the island “one way or the other.”

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte will be meeting with the Danish defence minister as the alliance is planning “next steps” to bolster Arctic security.

Voter choices in several Member States will have an impact on whether the EU consolidates its centralising drift or preserves internal counterweights.

European officials will try to persuade the U.S. president that they can keep Greenland secure by themselves.

Britain, France, and Germany are exploring a NATO-backed deployment to safeguard the island from Russian and Chinese influence.

Strict immigration policies have pushed the number of approved applications below 1,000 in 2025.

The president is not interested in simply signing a document over the island, saying that ownership itself “is psychologically needed for success.”

Copenhagen warns that a hostile U.S. initiative would break NATO apart—but Greenland’s prime minister urges calm.

The proposed overhaul would allow authorities to expel foreign nationals convicted of serious crimes even if they have long-standing ties to the country.