EDITORIAL. There is no guarantee that Donald Trump's unexpected about-face on Greenland will be the last. The crisis between the US and the EU, which the American president has obsessively scorned, remains profound and serious.

Transatlantic relations aren't broken, though they are damaged. And if Europeans want to try to cut through with Trump, they'll have to stick together, writes Europe Editor Katya…

Speaking to reporters in Florida, US president claims Denmark ‘can’t protect’ Greenland when asked what he planned to say to European leaders who opposed his plans

The FT noted that Danish officials said the troop deployment was preceded by "months of fruitless private diplomacy" with Washington

The argument over Greenland has threatened to reignite a trade war with Europe and upend the NATO alliance that underpins Western security.

Trump's aggressive stance on Greenland strains NATO, challenging European sovereignty and igniting unprecedented transatlantic tensions.

E.U. leaders pledge a strong response to Trump's Greenland demands, risking transatlantic relations at the World Economic Forum.

Trump’s demand for Greenland is a throwback to the 1884 Berlin conference: a transaction of land and people driven by a might makes right worldview

US president said European leaders will ‘find out’ how far he is ready to go to acquire Greenland

CNBC takes a look at how diplomatic tensions over Greenland have reached a crisis point.

Trump has angered European leaders with his Greenland ambitions and tariffs-for-all-who-oppose approach.

Trump was speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, which has been dominated by his claim over the Danish territory.

Trump demands urgent talks on Greenland acquisition, asserting U.S. strength but ruling out military action against Denmark.

The US president, at the World Economic Forum, says he'll have 'many meetings' on Greenland as Europe tensions simmer.

From the ‘big bazooka’ to a world cup boycott, Europe has retaliatory fire-power. But is it united enough to use it against the US?

Markets rebounded and European leaders were somewhat reassured by the president's anticipated speech.

Trump boasted of a “framework of a future deal” regarding U.S. access to Greenland for military purposes — access it already under an existing agreement.

Despite talk of a deal over Greenland, it will be hard for US allies to return to business as usual, writes the BBC’s diplomatic correspondent.

Trump told Davos attendees the US won’t use military force to take Greenland but demanded ‘immediate negotiations’ – key US politics stories from Wednesday 21 January at a glance

EDITORIAL. There is no guarantee that Donald Trump's unexpected about-face on Greenland will be the last. The crisis between the US and the EU, which the American president has…

The Dutchman, who has cultivated good relations with the American president, proposed transferring sovereignty over the Pituffik military base. These concessions still need to be…