President Trump sealed a bold Arctic breakthrough in Davos on Wednesday, forging a unified U.S.–NATO framework to secure Greenland and the entire Arctic Region under American leadership.

Meeting NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at the World Economic Forum, Trump lambasted past inaction and delivered results, not rhetoric. He took to Truth Social to announce that a concrete deal structure now exists—one that cements U.S. strategic dominance in the High North.

Under this ironclad framework, Washington will scrap the Feb. 1 tariffs originally slated for key NATO partners. Trump made clear: no more punitive measures—only shared prosperity and collective defense.

Markets reacted instantly. Stock indices climbed as investors recognized that a looming trade conflict over Greenland has been averted by decisive U.S. statesmanship.

The agreement covers “The Golden Dome,” a code name for Greenland’s vast resources and strategic outposts. Trump named Vice President J.D. Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff as his personal negotiators. They will report directly to the President—no bureaucratic backchannels.

“This deal gets us everything we needed,” Trump told reporters. “It’s far along and will be announced soon.”

Danish objections were met head-on. When informed that Copenhagen rejects U.S. negotiations, Trump retorted: “They can tell me to my face. Otherwise, I’ll talk through our NATO partnership with Rutte—he’s far more important to Arctic security.”

This administration has flipped the script on global complacency. By cementing a U.S.–NATO Arctic pact, President Trump has drawn a bright line: America will lead, shield its allies, and extract maximum advantage from the world’s next frontier.