Europe find way to speak with one voice against Trump

No more fawning praise. No more polite workarounds and old-style diplomacy. And no one is calling Donald Trump "daddy" now. European leaders who scrambled for a year to figure out how to deal with an emboldened American president in his second term edged closer to saying "no," or something diplomatically like it, to his disregard for international law and his demands for their territory.
Trump's vow to take over Greenland and punish any country that resists seems to have been the crucible. "Red lines" were deemed to have been crossed this year when Trump abruptly revived his demand that the United States "absolutely" must rule Greenland, the semiautonomous region that is part of NATO ally Denmark.
That pushed even the most mild-mannered diplomats to issue sharp warnings against Trump, whom they had flattered withroyal treatment and fawning praise. "Britain will not yield" its support for Greenland's sovereignty, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said.








