From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who is in power.

Editorial: Tariff threats over the Arctic island expose the limits of coercive diplomacy. Europe’s united response and pushback shows fear is fading

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

From day one, our newsroom made a commitment: we will not back down. We will not dilute the truth to avoid retaliation. And we will not stop asking hard questions, no matter who…

At a press briefing Tuesday afternoon, a reporter asked President Donald Trump how far he's willing to go on Greenland: "You'll find out," he said.

The president will always “go as far as he can until someone stops him," cautioned the New York Times journalist.