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** NEW MERCH ** Jackets & Sweatshirts, Thermo Mugs!! Daniel Davis Deep Dive Merch: Etsy store https://www.etsy.com/shop/DanielDavis... Cables show Trump’s moves on Greenland rattled other nations State Department cables obtained by POLITICO lay bare the frustrations — and aspirations — of US allies and adversaries watching Trump seek the Danish island. https://www.politico.com/news/2026/01... Not a Denmark spat—an EU-wide rupture: Trump’s rhetoric over Greenland united the entire EU against the U.S., not just Denmark. He ultimately backed down because he lacked diplomatic strength, even if he had military leverage. Diplomacy failure: Effective negotiation requires bringing partners along. Trump’s brash, threatening language alienated allies and made cooperation impossible—especially coming from a supposed friend. Public and military backlash in Europe: European publics view Trump as reckless for importing the language of force into their continent. British defense circles, including senior military figures, felt deep discomfort and cognitive dissonance—supportive of the U.S. generally, but appalled on this issue. British outrage over troop remarks: Trump’s comments downplaying British frontline service (notably Afghanistan) caused national outrage in the UK—front-page condemnation, anger among soldiers and families—made worse by his draft avoidance. Later walk-backs were seen as too late and insincere. Rubio’s reassurances ring hollow: Claims that “everything’s fine” and that technical talks will resolve Greenland don’t address the deeper trust deficit. The core issue isn’t the Arctic interest itself (which allies acknowledge), but how the U.S. pursued it. Damage goes beyond Greenland: This incident layers onto broader unease in transatlantic relations. Diplomatic cables even reference “divorce” as a concept entering discussions. Geopolitical consequences: China is actively exploiting the rift. Europe, the UK, Canada, and others are hedging economically—cutting deals with China, India, and elsewhere explicitly to reduce dependence on the U.S. Strategic self-sabotage: By antagonizing allies, the U.S. is creating alternatives for them—weakening transatlantic unity, accelerating dollar vulnerability, and reducing American leverage. Leadership bubble problem: Trump appears to believe his own rosy narrative, likely due to insular briefing and sycophantic advisors—“the naked king” effect. A turning point: The era of unquestioned U.S. dominance and allied deference is ending. Allies are beginning to challenge, rebalance, and assert autonomy. A correction is coming—either through rapid change in approach or continued fragmentation.