All eyes will be on Davos on Wednesday afternoon as US President Donald Trump is set to deliver a speech, hours after doubling down on his bid to acquire Greenland saying that there is "no going back".
Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Freredirksen, and her counterpart in Greenland, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, are taking the threat seriously, with both saying on Tuesday that they "cannot rule out" a US military intervention.
Europe is trying to close ranks and those who took to the stage already in Davos have said the European Union stands ready to respond and meet the changing geopolitical times.
European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen vowed for instance that the EU's response should Trump proceed with his tariff threat would be "unfliching", while French President Emmanuel Macron called on the blow to "not be shy" or divided and to not "passively accept the law of the strongest".
Bart de Wever, the Belgian prime minister, had a similar message, warning that "80 years of Atlanticism are drawing to a close" and that "either we stand together or we stand divided, and if we are divided, it marks the end of an era".
But a lot of the action today will actually take place behind closed doors with Trump set to meet with some European leaders as well as NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte. Von der Leyen, who travelled to Strasbourg on Tuesday evening, is set to return to Davos in the hope of some face time with the US leader, Euronews understands.
After discussing the crisis over Greenland, António Costa shares a reflection about the turbulent state of the international order.
"The first way for Europe to become stronger and more sovereign is to remain a firm champion of the international rules-based order, international law and multilateralism. We will always uphold the principles enshrined in the United Nations Charter and defend human dignity and individual freedoms," he says.
"We cannot accept that the law of the strongest prevails over the rights of the weakest. Because international rules are not optional. And alliances cannot just boil down to a sequence of transactions," he adds, referring to Trump's notoriously transactional approach to foreign policy, which has unnerved Europeans.
"We cannot accept violations of international law. Anywhere. Whether in Ukraine, Greenland, Latin America, Africa, or in Gaza," Costa goes on.
"In times like these, principles matter more than ever. Because reliability is strength, and consistency is key."
António Costa continues his speech addressing the crisis over Greenland, which will be discussed by leaders during an extraordinary summit on Thursday evening.
He says member states are "united around the principles of international law, territorial integrity and national sovereignty" and "in full support and solidarity with the Kingdom of Denmark and with Greenland."
"Only they, Denmark and Greenland, can decide on their future," he says.
Costa adds that both sides of the Atlantic have a "shared interest in peace and security" in the Arctic region, which climate change is making increasingly strategic. He then warns that the 10% tariffs threatened by Donald Trump against eight European countries, aimed at forcing the sale of Greenland, "undermine transatlantic relations and are incompatible with the EU-US (trade) agreement."
"We stand ready to defend ourselves, our member states, our citizens, our companies, against any form of coercion. And the European Union has the power and the tools to do so," he says, in what reads as a reference to the Anti-Coercion Instrument, the so-called "trade bazooka".
"We want to continue engaging constructively with the United States on all issues of common interest – and there are many, since we are partners and allies and share a transatlantic community."
António Costa, the president of the European Council, has begun his speech at the European Parliament in Strasbourg.
"Let’s face it: taken together, the geopolitical challenges Europe is facing sometimes seem daunting," Costa says, referring to Russia's war on Ukraine, transatlantic tensions over Greenland and the erosion of the rules-based global order.
"But the European Union will come out of this stronger, more resilient and more sovereign. For this to happen, our response must have three components: A Europe of principles. A Europe of protection. And a Europe of prosperity."
"All these three dimensions are being tested in the current moment of transatlantic relations," he adds.
Good morning and welcome to our third day of live coverage on the Greenland crisis dividing the US and the European Union.
We will, once again, seek to bring you the very latest on developments in Brussels, other European capitals, Washington, and Davos.
The two main events we'll be avidly watching from the Swiss mountains are as follows:
Curated by Shiv Shakti Mishra






