• January 22, 2026
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Trump said on Wednesday that he will not use force to get Greenland, but is “seeking immediate negotiations to once again discuss the acquisition” by the US.

Trump’s ongoing threats against Europe over his desire to take over Greenland have been dominating this year’s Davos agenda.

All eyes were on Trump during his 70-minute-long speech, with billionaire CEOs — including Apple’s Tim Cook and Salesforce’s Marc Benioff — alongside heads of state filling up Congress Hall to hear what he had to say.

Speaking on CNBC’s Squawk Box on Wednesday, Citadel’s CEO and founder Ken Griffin said Trump had an “important message to deliver to a European audience that, bluntly, needs to do better. Europe’s economic growth lags far behind America.”

“The commitment of the American people to defend our country runs deep. The commitment of the Europeans to defend their countries — if you look at surveys of the population — is not nearly as strong,” he added.

Griffin said he thought one of Trump’s “important foundational statements he made with respect to the justification why the US needs unfettered access to Greenland” was whether Europe would be there for the US if there was another war.

However, Griffin said that if the US does decide to “pursue this path”, discussions “should take time and be thoughtfully laid out.”

Peter Schiff, the chief economist at Euro Pacific Asset Management, said it looked like “cooler heads prevailed at the White House.”

“So if the US can’t buy Greenland instead of taking it by military force, Trump will just hold a grudge,” Schiff, whose firm managed $1.4 billion last year, wrote on X.

“While that is a major improvement, it also means that if we do succeed in buying Greenland, we’ll massively overpay.”

Source: Africabusinessinsider

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