
France to send āland, air and sea assetsā to Greenland
France will boost its military presence in Greenland in the coming days, President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday, as U.S. President Donald Trump continues to ramp up pressure in his bid to annex the Danish territory. "An initial team of French soldiers is already on site and will be reinforced in the coming days by land, air and sea assets," Macron told an audience of top military brass during his new year address to the armed forces. "France and Europeans must continue, wherever their interests are threatened, to be present without escalation, but uncompromising on respect for territorial sovereignty," he added, speaking in Istres, an airbase in the south of France that hosts nuclear-capable warplanes. Advertisement On Wednesday, several European nations including France, Germany, Sweden and Norway said they would send troops to Greenland to participate in a Danish military exercise, amid repeated threats by Trump that the U.S. could use force to seize the island. After a White House meeting on Wednesday, Denmark and Greenland āstill have a fundamental disagreementā with the U.S., Denmark said . In an obvious jab at Trump, who he didn't mention by name, Macron criticized "a new colonialism that is at work among some." Europeans have the means to be less dependent on the U.S., he added, revealing that two-thirds of Ukraine's intelligence capabilities are now provided by France. In an address to his Cabinet on Wednesday, Macron warned that if the United States seized Greenland from Denmark, it would trigger a wave of "unprecedented" consequences, a government spokesperson said . The French president convened a defense council meeting Thursday morning to discuss both the Iranian uprising and the situation in Greenland, POLITICO reported . More money for defense Macron started increasing defense spending again as soon as he was elected in 2017, even before Russia's full-scale attack on Ukraine and NATO's commitment to boost budgets. Advertisement The French president confirmed that France would seek to increase defense spending by ā¬36 billion between 2026 and 2030, adding he wants the updated military planning law to be voted by parliament by July 14. "This decade of French rearmament is bearing fruit ... and rearmament efforts will continue," he told the audience. However, the military planning law has been delayed by France's spiralling political crisis. It was initially scheduled for last fall and has already been put off several times. As well, the ā¬6.7 billion boost for 2026 still hasnāt been approved by lawmakers, and it's unclear whether (and when) the government will manage to convince MPs to pass this year's budget. In another jab at Trump, Macron said Paris wasn't increasing military expenditures to "please this or that ally, but based on our analysis of the threat." That's a reference to last year's NATO decision to set a new defense spending target of 5 percent of GDP ā following significant pressure from the U.S. president. The three main priorities for France's spending boost are: to increase munition stocks; to develop sovereign capabilities in air defense, early...
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