An extraordinary Brussels summit highlights Europe’s firm stance on sovereignty and economic coercion, while raising new questions about future transatlantic relations.
EU leaders used a special summit in Brussels to deliver a clear message to US President Donald Trump: Europe expects “cordial and respectful” interactions, particularly after Trump’s tariff threats linked to Greenland. The immediate tensions subsided following a NATO-mediated Arctic security agreement, but European officials indicated they would defend sovereignty and markets, possibly using the EU’s powerful Anti-Coercion Instrument.
Following the emergency meeting, European Council President António Costa emphasized the importance of principle and approach. “Relationships between partners and allies should be managed cordially and respectfully,” he stated, warning that the EU would protect its interests “against any form of coercion,” as reported by Euronews.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen echoed this sentiment, presenting unity as the bloc’s main leverage. She stated the EU had been “successful” in countering territorial claims by being “firm, non-escalatory, and most importantly, very united,” according to Euronews. She also urged Europeans to boost economic resilience, diversify supply chains, and reduce vulnerabilities in key sectors.
A five-day crisis, then a fragile pause
The situation—described by European diplomats as a near-crisis—was defused when Trump reversed course and agreed to a longer-term Arctic security arrangement brokered by NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. However, details of that framework have not been disclosed, causing suspicion in several capitals that the political clash could resurface differently.
Leaders privately worried that rapid escalation—tariffs met with countermeasures—could cause wider economic damage and complicate coordination on security priorities, including efforts to end Russia’s war against Ukraine. Relief in Brussels came with a message: deterrence matters, as do predictable rules between allies.
Greenland’s sovereignty and the people at the centre
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen clearly stated Denmark is open to discussions with Washington about Greenland, but sovereignty is “off the table”—a “red line”—and “our democratic rules cannot be discussed,” according to Euronews.
Greenland, an autonomous part of the Kingdom of Denmark, has self-government under the Self-Government Act framework. Discussions about the island’s future inevitably raise questions of democratic legitimacy and self-determination, especially for Greenlanders whose political agency can be sidelined by great-power competition.
For EU officials, this is not merely rhetorical. If territorial questions are hinted at through economic pressure, it touches on core European norms: sovereignty, the rule of law, and the right of peoples to decide their own future without coercion.
The Anti-Coercion Instrument: Europe’s sharpest trade deterrent
Before Trump’s reversal, the Commission prepared potential responses in case tariff threats became action. Among the options was the EU’s Anti-Coercion Instrument, effective since late 2023, designed to deter and counter third-country “economic coercion.”
The tool is broad, capable of targeting multiple areas at once—from trade in goods and services to investment flows, public procurement, and intellectual property—while operating within defined EU procedures under a “last resort” logic.
The European Times has previously examined how this mechanism works and why it is crucial for Europe’s economic security in an earlier explainer on the Anti-Coercion Instrument. The debate now resurfaces: how to remain non-escalatory yet credible when pressure tactics emerge at the edge of allied diplomacy.
What this crisis reveals about the transatlantic relationship
At its core, the Brussels summit was more about trust than tariffs. EU leaders conveyed their desire to preserve transatlantic cooperation but not at the expense of normalizing threats—territorial














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