Updated 21 January 2026 at 08:29 IST
'We Don't Give In To Bullies': French President Macron After Trump's Tariffs Salvo Amid Greenland Takeover Bid
While other European leaders have tried to keep a measured tone to prevent the trans-Atlantic dispute from escalating, Macron came out swinging.
DAVOS, Switzerland: French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday said Europe would not give in to bullies or be intimidated, in a scathing criticism of U.S. President Donald Trump's threat to impose steep tariffs if Europe does not let him take over Greenland.
While other European leaders have tried to keep a measured tone to prevent the trans-Atlantic dispute from escalating, Macron came out swinging.
France, and Europe, will not "passively accept the law of the strongest," Macron said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, adding that doing otherwise would lead to their "vassalization".
Instead, he said, Europe will continue to stand up for territorial sovereignty and the rule of law, despite what he called a shift towards a world without rules. That could include the EU responding with its own steep trade sanctions.
NO TO BULLIES
"We do prefer respect to bullies," Macron said. “And we do prefer rule of law to brutality.” Macron wore aviator sunglasses during his speech, which the Elysee Palace said was to protect his eyes because of a burst blood vessel.
He delivered the speech after Trump threatened huge tariffs against French wine and champagne and posted private messages from Macron, an unusual breach of diplomatic discretion.
Trump had already vowed on Saturday to implement a wave of increasing tariffs from February 1 on several European allies, including France, until the U.S. is allowed to acquire Greenland, a step major EU states decried as blackmail.
Washington's "endless accumulation" of new tariffs is "fundamentally unacceptable," Macron said in Davos, "even more so when they are used as leverage against territorial sovereignty".
WHAT WILL EUROPE DO?
EU leaders decided over the weekend to convene in Brussels on Thursday evening for an emergency summit on Greenland. Tariffs on 93 billion euros of U.S. goods, which the EU set aside when Trump agreed a trade deal with the bloc last summer, could snap into place on February 6.
Macron has pushed for the EU also to consider the first use of its Anti-Coercion Instrument, informally known as the "trade bazooka", which could limit U.S. access to public tenders or restrict trade in services such as tech platforms. Macron said on Tuesday it was "crazy" it had gone that far.
Published By : Amrita Narayan
Published On: 21 January 2026 at 08:29 IST