ADVERTISEMENT

Trump’s ‘Nasty’ Label Draws Response From Danish Prime Minister

Trump’s ‘Nasty’ Label Draws Response From Danish Prime Minister

(Bloomberg) -- Denmark’s youngest ever prime minister has had her job for just over two months. But she’s already making international headlines as the target of Donald Trump’s ire.

On Wednesday, 41-year-old Mette Frederiksen made clear she didn’t want the U.S. president’s decision to cancel a state visit to Denmark to become a diplomatic crisis. Trump, who axed a planned Sept. 2 trip because he wasn’t allowed to buy Greenland, was still welcome to come another time, Frederiksen told reporters in Copenhagen. She also said that the U.S. is one of Denmark’s closest allies.

But Trump lashed out later in the day. Frederiksen’s use of the word “absurd” to characterize reports of his interest in purchasing Greenland, which is part of the Kingdom of Denmark, was “nasty,” according to the former real estate tycoon.

Trump’s ‘Nasty’ Label Draws Response From Danish Prime Minister

Frederiksen says she doesn’t feel her words were disrespectful. “I don’t think I have been blunt or harsh in this discussion,” she told state broadcaster DR. “I actually think we have responded very nicely from the Danish side.”

“When you are close allies and good friends, like Denmark and the U.S. are, there should also be room for disagreements along the way,” Frederiksen said. “I hope we can stop this discussion soon.”

Trump says he canceled his trip to Denmark, which was at the invitation of Queen Margrethe II, because of Frederiksen’s choice of words.

‘Very Nasty’

“When they say it was absurd -- and it was said in a very nasty, very sarcastic way -- I said, ‘We’ll make it some other time,’” Trump told reporters. “She’s talking to the United States of America. You don’t talk to the United States that way, at least under me.”

“All she had to do was say, ‘No we wouldn’t be interested,’” Trump said.

In an effort to defuse the tensions, U.S. ambassador to Denmark, Carla Sands, on Wednesday said that Trump “values and respects” the Danes and is looking forward to a trip at a later date. She added that “great friends and allies” like the U.S. and Denmark “should be able to discuss all issues openly and candidly.”

On Wednesday evening, the State Department said that Secretary of State Michael Pompeo had spoken with Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod “regarding the postponement of President Trump’s travel to Denmark.”

The department said in a statement that Pompeo “expressed appreciation for Denmark’s cooperation as one of the United States’ allies and Denmark’s contributions to address shared global security priorities.”

Maybe Next Time

In a bizarre twist, this isn’t the first time Trump narrowly missed out on meeting the Danish Queen. According to a report in Politiken on Thursday, Queen Margrethe II spent a night at the Plaza Hotel in New York in 1991, when it was still owned by Trump, after paying President George H. W. Bush a visit in Washington D.C. Uffe Ellemann-Jensen, a former Danish foreign minister who was part of the Queen’s entourage, helped her dodge an encounter with Trump, who had wanted his photo taken with the monarch. “The Queen hinted discreetly that she did not find this idea fantastic,” Politiken cites Ellemann-Jensen as saying in a book that includes the episode. “So I went to stall him while the Queen slipped out into the city through a back door.” Ellemann-Jensen says he then took the opportunity to regale Trump with anecdotes about Greenland.

NATO

Trump used his attack against Frederiksen to suggest Denmark isn’t paying what it owes to NATO. The remark drew a sharp response from Frederiksen’s predecessor, Lars Lokke Rasmussen, who met with Trump while he was premier.

“As I told you at the NATO summit in Brussels last year, we have had proportionally exactly the same number of casualties in Afghanistan as the U.S. We always stand firm and ready, so we will not accept that our defense willingness is only about percentages.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Morten Buttler in Copenhagen at mbuttler@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tasneem Hanfi Brögger at tbrogger@bloomberg.net;Nick Rigillo at nrigillo@bloomberg.net

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.