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Donald Trump has been talking about Greenland again.Not as a diplomatic issue.Not as a negotiation with allies.But as territory the United States should control.
Most people laughed it off the first time. This time, the laughter stopped—because when his administration was asked whether military force was off the table, they didn’t say yes.
Greenland isn’t just a patch of ice on a map. It’s tied to Denmark. Denmark is a NATO ally. And NATO runs on a single promise: an attack on one is an attack on all. That promise has kept the peace for generations.
The headlines focused on Trump’s rhetoric. The threats. The bravado.But the real action happened somewhere quieter.
While Trump tested the outer edges of foreign policy with words, lawmakers in Washington started asking a different question: not should this happen—but how could it happen at all?
Because presidents don’t go to war with speeches. They go to war with authority, logistics, and money.
And once troops move, it’s too late to debate intent.
What happened next didn’t make cable news. It didn’t trend on social media. But it may be the most effective constraint placed on Trump’s power since he returned to office.
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