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    You are at:Home»Politics»NATO members to face tariffs increasing to 25%
    Politics

    NATO members to face tariffs increasing to 25%

    By AdminJanuary 17, 2026
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    NATO members to face tariffs increasing to 25%


    U.S.President Donald Trump arrives at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, in Michigan, U.S., January 13, 2026.

    Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

    Eight NATO members’ goods sent to the U.S. will face escalating tariffs “until such time as a Deal is reached for the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland,” President Donald Trump announced Saturday.

    The tariffs targeting Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Finland will start at 10% on Feb. 1, Trump wrote in a Truth Social post.

    The tariffs will shoot up to 25% on June 1, the president said.

    The penalties would presumably stack on top of existing U.S. tariffs already levied against goods from these individual countries.

    Trump’s post suggested that the new tariffs on the European allies were being imposed in response to them moving troops to Greenland. They took that step as the Trump administration has floated utilizing the U.S. military as part of its ramped-up efforts to acquire the Danish territory.

    The eight countries “have journeyed to Greenland, for purposes unknown,” Trump wrote. “This is a very dangerous situation for the Safety, Security, and Survival of our Planet.”

    A day earlier, Trump hinted that he may pursue a tariff strategy on Greenland similar to the one he used to force foreign countries to lower drug prices.

    “I may do that for Greenland too. I may put a tariff on countries if they don’t go along with Greenland, because we need Greenland for national security,” he said at the White House on Friday.

    While the President did not cite specific legal statutes in his Truth Social announcement for his latest moves, it appears to mirror his controversial use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, a law granting the president broad powers during an “unusual and extraordinary threat.”

    The Supreme Court could rule as soon as next week on whether to strike down the tariffs imposed under that law and could immediately imperil this new tranche, effectively daring the judiciary to intervene in a fresh trade war.

    Scott Lincicome, a trade policy scholar at the Cato Institute, warned Saturday that the new threat exposes the fragility of relying on unilateral deals rather than binding treaties.

    “Trump’s tariff announcement confirms… that his trade deals can be changed on a whim and are unlikely to constrain his daily tariff impulses,” Lincicome said in a statement. “Today’s threat underscores the empty justifications for Trump’s so-called ’emergency’ tariffs, which reveal the economic and geopolitical problems that unbounded executive power creates.”

    Military personnel believed to be from the German armed Forces Bundeswehr disembark a charter plane upon arrival at Nuuk international airport on Jan. 16, 2026 in Nuuk, Greenland, the day after it arrived transporting Danish military personnel.

    Alessandro Rampazzo | AFP | Getty Images

    European response

    Across Europe, the targeted nations responded with condemnation, characterizing the tariffs as a hostile act against close military allies that threatens the very fabric of the trans-Atlantic partnership.

    European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who spearheads the bloc’s trade policy, issued a sharp rebuke to the White House’s ultimatum, framing the tariffs not just as a trade dispute but as a test of Western values.

    “We choose partnership and cooperation,” von der Leyen wrote in a post on Bluesky shortly after the announcement. “We choose our businesses. We choose our people.”

    Likewise, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen told MS Now Saturday that Trump’s move came as a “surprise,” citing a recent “constructive meeting” with U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

    Frederiksen pushed back on Trump’s claims regarding troop movements, stating the increased presence is strictly to “enhance security” in an Arctic region that is “no longer a low tension area,” and was done in “full transparency” with U.S. allies.

    Other European leaders were equally firm. European Council President Antonio Costa said Saturday that the bloc is “coordinating a joint response” to the threat.

    “The European Union will always be very firm in defending international law, wherever it may be,” Costa said at a press conference Saturday following the signing of a trade agreement between the EU and South American nations in Paraguay.

    French President Emmanuel Macron also weighed in, posting on X that “no intimidation nor threat will influence us.” Macron warned that “stabilizing forces have awakened” and vowed that France would stand firm alongside its neighbors.

    Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson sternly rejected Trump’s tariff threats.

    “We will not allow ourselves to be blackmailed,” he wrote on X, adding that “only Denmark and Greenland decide on issues concerning Denmark and Greenland.”

    A protester takes part in a demonstration to show support for Greenland in Copenhagen, Denmark, on Jan. 17, 2026.

    Tom Little | Reuters

    NATO strain and legal battles

    Trump’s latest move puts further strain on NATO, the 32-member military alliance established after World War II. The cornerstone of the alliance is an agreement that an attack on any single member is considered an attack on them all.

    European leaders have warned that any attempt by the U.S. to take Greenland by force could spell the end of NATO.

    Trump’s tariff announcement could signal he is dropping the threat of military action to achieve his longtime goal of taking over the island. But it nevertheless ratchets up pressure on Denmark and the rest of Europe, which have flatly stated that Greenland is not for sale.

    Lawmakers push for de-escalation

    As the White House ramped up pressure, a bipartisan U.S. congressional delegation in Copenhagen pushed back against Trump’s narrative.

    “There are no pressing security threats to Greenland,” Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., told reporters Saturday morning.

    Coons and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, led the trip to “restore a sense of trust” with Greenland, Coons said.

    The two senators disputed Trump’s characterization of European troop movements as a conspiracy to block U.S. acquisition of the island, instead praising the deployments as NATO partners “stepping up,” Coons said, to secure the High North against Russian aggression.

    “Seeing active training and deployments into one of the harshest, most remote places on Earth… we should take as an encouraging signal,” Coons said.

    Murkowski emphasized that despite the president’s attacks, support for Denmark remains strong across party lines.

    “You cannot allow this to become a partisan matter,” she said. “Support for our friends and allies… should not be.”

    This is breaking news. Please refresh for updates.



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