Fifty-five Cuban and Venezuelan troops were killed in the US raid to seize Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan president.

Cuba published the names of 32 members of its military who died in the assault on Caracas early on Saturday morning, and Venezuela issued a list of 23 of its personnel who were killed.

Keep Maduro lieutenants, US officials say

A secret intelligence assessment said senior members of Nicolas Maduro’s regime were best positioned to lead a Venezuelan government after him, NBC News reports.

US officials believed this was the best way to maintain stability after Maduro’s exit, said the report. Among those they backed were Delcy Rodriguez, who was sworn in as Venezuela’s new president on Monday.

Torture chamber allegation

Trump also claimed during his speech that the Maduro regime operated a torture chamber in the Venezuelan capital.

He said: “And [Maduro has] killed millions of people. He’s tortured. They have a torture chamber in the middle of Caracas that they were closing up.”

‘He tries to imitate my dance’

President Trump has said he was annoyed at the way Maduro had tried to copy his signature moves.

Trump danced off stage at the end of a rally in North Carolina on the day before the 2024 presidential election

Trump danced off stage at the end of a rally in North Carolina on the day before the 2024 presidential election

CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES

During his speech to senior Republicans in Washington, the US president said: “He gets up there and he tries to imitate my dance a little bit,” he said during his speech to senior Republicans in Washington.

Reports earlier in the week suggested that one of the reasons Trump ordered the military action in Venezuela was that in recent public appearances, the captured Venezuela president had been shown singing and dancing.

Three men dancing on a stage decorated for Christmas.

At one point, Maduro sang John Lennon’s Imagine to a crowd of supporters. This was interpreted in Washington as Maduro mocking Trump, reported the New York Times.

After his speech on Tuesday, Trump danced to YMCA by Village People.

Wall Street takes volatility in its stride

Wall Street traders and dealmakers returned to their desks on Monday for the first full day of trading in 2026 under a shifting global world order, but despite the escalation of geopolitical tensions in the wake of President Trump’s military adventures in Venezuela, the focus was on rising US equities and an acceleration of mergers and acquisitions activity.

Andrew Woeber, global head of M&A at Barclays, said: “I think CEOs and boards have become used to volatility, uncertainty and risk. I would say that they look at it this way: that the bigger risk for them is not acting and waiting for perfect conditions.”

• Read Louisa Clarence-Smith’s column in full: Wall Street is taking Trump’s Venezuela adventure in its stride

PMs of Denmark and Canada meet

Mette Frederiksen and Mark Carney, the prime ministers of Denmark and Canada, met on the margins of the Ukraine talks in Paris to discuss President Trump’s threats to annex Greenland.

Mette Frederiksen and Mark Carney at the Canadian Embassy in Paris on Tuesday

Mette Frederiksen and Mark Carney at the Canadian Embassy in Paris on Tuesday

CHRISTINNE MUSCHI/THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP

“As Nato allies and close partners, the leaders discussed Arctic security and the growing investments from both nations in infrastructure and defence,” a statement released by Carney’s office said. Carney had, it said: “emphasised Canada’s support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Denmark, including Greenland, which must be respected in accordance with international law”.

Greenland is a semi-autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark. Trump has repeatedly stated that the US should take control of the island for reasons of national security, an argument that has been widely rejected by European leaders. Trump has also spoken of a desire to make Canada the 51st American state.

Colombia responds to Trump threat

Colombia’s foreign minister Rosa Villavicencio said her country’s military must defend the country’s sovereignty in the event of any US “aggression”.

In a speech in Bogota she said the Trump administration should have “more detail” of what the country was doing in the fight against drugs.

President Trump threatened Colombia with military action on Sunday after capturing President Maduro in a strike on Venezuela on Saturday.

It was brilliant, Trump tells Republicans

President Trump has described the US military mission to snatch Nicolas Maduro from Venezuela as “brilliant”.

President Trump arrives at the Republican Party’s annual policy retreat in Washington

President Trump arrives at the Republican Party’s annual policy retreat in Washington

EVAN VUCCI/AP

The event is at the Kennedy Center, recently renamed by its Trump-appointed board as the Trump-Kennedy Center

The event is at the Kennedy Center, recently renamed by its Trump-appointed board as the Trump-Kennedy Center

KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS

Speaking at a Republican party event in Washington, he said: “It was brilliant… it was brilliant tactically, an incredible thing.”

He called on domestic critics to give the military action more praise, saying: “The US proved once again we have the most powerful and fearsome military” in the world. “Nobody can take us,” he said.

Venezuelans ‘should determine their destiny’

Russia has affirmed solidarity with the Venezuelan government and insisted that Venezuelans should determine their own destiny.

The Russian foreign ministry welcomed the appointment of Delcy Rodríguez as interim president of Venezuela, stating: “We welcome the efforts undertaken by the country’s official authorities to protect state sovereignty and national interests.

“For our part, we express our readiness to continue providing the necessary support to our friend Venezuela. We firmly maintain that Venezuela must be guaranteed the right to determine its own destiny without any destructive external interference.”

Delcy Rodríguez

Delcy Rodríguez

LEONARDO FERNANDEZ VILORIA/REUTERS

Greenland PM’s ‘deep gratitude’ for support

In further comments from the Greenlandic prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen said support from European powers “is important at a time when fundamental international principles are being challenged. For this support, I wish to express my deepest gratitude.”

He added: “At a time when the president of the United States has once again stated that the United States is very serious about Greenland, this support from our allies in Nato is both important and unequivocal.”

Nielsen said: “Our country is not something that can be annexed or taken over simply because someone wishes to do so.”

Netherlands backs joint Greenland statement

The Dutch prime minister, Dick Schoof, has said the Netherlands “fully supports” the statement published by European leaders earlier in the day that the future of Denmark and Greenland is for Denmark and Greenland to decide.

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US ‘stupid’ for demanding Greenland

A US congressman has said it “embarrassing” for the US that European allies have felt the need to issue a joint statement affirming the sovereignty of Greenland.

Don Bacon, a Republican from Nebraska, also accused the White House of “denigrating our allies” and called on the Trump administration to stop the “Greenland BS”.

“It is embarrassing for the US that this statement even has to be made,” he wrote on X.

“Denigrating our allies serves no purpose and there is NO up side. It weakens us by diminishing trust between friends, and Russia and China love it. So … stop the stupid ‘we want Greenland BS’.”

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Show respect, Greenland PM tells US
Greenland’s prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, with the Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen

Greenland’s prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, with the Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen

MADS CLAUS RASMUSSEN/EPA

The United States should “seek a respectful dialogue” with Greenland, the Arctic territory’s prime minister has said.

In a statement on Facebook, Nielsen thanked European leaders who issued a joint declaration this morning affirming that “it is for Denmark and Greenland, and them only, to decide on matters concerning Denmark and Greenland”.

He continued: “I must again call on the US to seek a respectful dialogue through the correct diplomatic and political channels and the use of already existing forums, based on agreements that already exist with the US.

“The dialogue must take place with respect for the fact that Greenland’s status is rooted in international law and the principle of territorial integrity.”

As Venezuelans celebrate, British friends wonder why

Venezuelans living in the UK expressed mixed emotions about the US operation to oust Maduro, but the overwhelming one was relief.

There were more than 21,000 Venezuelan-born people in Britain at the most recent census in 2021, and celebrations broke out around the country.

Read in full: As Venezuelans celebrate Maduro’s capture, British friends wonder why

However, Venezuelans also said they felt “bullied” by Britons as protesters called for the release of Maduro outside Downing Street on Monday evening.

China: US trampled on Venezuelan sovereignty

China has accused the US of “trampling” on Venezuela’s sovereignty.

Mao Ning, the Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman, said on Tuesday: “As a permanent member of the security council, the US has disregarded the serious concerns of the international community and trampled upon Venezuela’s sovereignty, security and legitimate rights and interests. China firmly opposes this.”

When asked whether the Chinese government was considering sanctions against the US, she said: “We support the security council in fulfilling its primary responsibility to champion international peace and security.”

Badenoch: Deposing Maduro was right

Kemi Badenoch says US action in Venezuela was “morally right”

Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, said that deposing Maduro was morally “the right thing to do”, but the legality of it “is not yet clear”.

Speaking on Today on BBC Radio 4, she drew a comparison between Venezuela, which she described as a “gangster state”, and the Nigeria of her childhood.

“I grew up under a military dictatorship, so I know what it’s like to have someone like Maduro in charge,” she said.

She also expressed concern over Trump’s threats to take over Greenland, stating: “What happens in Greenland is up to Denmark and the people of Greenland.”

Later, she told Sky News that the Nato alliance was “looking fragile” and called on Sir Keir Starmer to do “everything he can to ensure that President Trump stays at the table”.

US raid ‘signals that the powerful are above the law’

The UN human rights office spokesperson, Ravina Shamdasani, has warned that the US operation in Venezuela makes the world less safe.

She said the US raid damaged the “architecture of international security” and sent “a signal that the powerful can do whatever they like”.

Shamdasani called on the international community to “come together with one voice to insist” that the American intervention undermined international law.

A US flag is burnt during a protest in Brazil on Monday

A US flag is burnt during a protest in Brazil on Monday

TUANE FERNANDES/REUTERS

US ‘threatening civilised relations’, Russian politician says

The US has “laid a mine” beneath the foundations of international relations, the head of Russia’s foreign relations committee has said in response to comments by Stephen Miller, a senior Trump aide, who said that the world is “governed by strength”.

“The United States has publicly and cynically proclaimed the ‘right of might’, and in doing so laid a mine beneath the system of civilised international relations,” Leonid Slutsky said. “As White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said, ‘You can talk all you want about international propriety, but the real world is governed by force and power.’”

Slutsky, who is head of the influential committee on international affairs in Russia’s parliament, said that European leaders gathering in Paris for Ukraine talks today were guilty of “double standards” given their mealy-mouthed response to the abduction of Nicolas Maduro.

Why does Trump want Greenland?
Donald Trump Jr.'s plane at Nuuk Airport, Greenland.

Donald Trump Jr visited Greenland in January last year

EMIL STACH/RITZAU SCANPIX/REUTERS

Since the capture of Maduro, Trump has ramped up threats to seize control of Greenland, which he has long argued should come under US control.

Trump has refused to rule out using military force to occupy the island, which the prime ministers of both Denmark and Greenland insist is not for sale.

He initially became interested during his first term in the White House after it was suggested by his friend Ronald Lauder, heir to the Estée Lauder cosmetics brand. Why is he so interested?

Read in full: Why does Trump want Greenland?

Opposition call for release of political prisoners

The opposition leader María Corina Machado’s movement has demanded the release of almost 900 political prisoners after the US captured Nicolás Maduro.

“Those who unjustly hold the civilian and military political prisoners should free them immediately,” Vente Venezuela said of political detainees linked to the movement, of which a leading local rights group estimates there are 863.

RAF ‘intercepting Russian tanker’
Typhoon fighter jets

Typhoon fighter jets

LEON NEAL/GETTY IMAGES

Two Royal Air Force jets are thought to be headed to intercept a Russia-flagged tanker that broke the US blockade of Venezuela.

An RAF Typhoon fighter, accompanied by a KC2 Voyager tanker aircraft, was tracked heading to where the Marinera, formerly Bella 1, was last spotted.

The ship is among at least 16 US sanctioned oil tankers that reportedly attempted to break the US naval blockade over the past two days in a possibly co-ordinated action.

The Marinera tanker vessel is now sailing in stormy weather towards Iceland. Since last month, US forces have pursued the crude oil tanker. Two officials familiar with the Marinera seizure plans told CBS on Monday that the US planned to seize the ship.

Danish MPs called to extraordinary meeting

The Danish parliament’s foreign policy committee has been called to an extraordinary meeting this evening, with only one item on the agenda: Copenhagen’s relationship with the US.

Denmark’s Jyllands-Posten newspaper reports that the meeting will take place at 6pm local time and will be held in a “secret, secure room at Christiansborg Palace”, a government building in central Copenhagen.

The meeting comes amid growing alarm in Denmark over claims in Washington that it could annex Greenland.

US needs Greenland for security and 'we will worry about it in two months,' says Trump

Trump has threatened to seize Greenland, over which Denmark has sovereignty

Greenland MP calls for bilateral deal with US

Kuno Fencker, a Greenland MP, has said he would favour a “bilateral agreement” on defence and security between Greenland and the US and urged his government to “go and talk” to the Trump administration.

He told Times Radio the Northwest Passage was opening up to shipping which means Greenland is “a very important geopolitical area”.

Fencker, a member of Naleraq, a pro-independence party, added: “In my opinion, we should have a bilateral agreement — Greenland, the United States — in regards to defence and security.” He also accused the Greenland government of throwing “a childish tantrum”.

Fencker said: “And they have to go and talk to the US administration and find out what are their interests, what are their concerns.”

European leaders close ranks over Greenland

Greenland belongs to its people and only Denmark and Greenland can decide on their relations, the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, Britain and Denmark said in a joint statement on Tuesday.

“It is for Denmark and Greenland, and them only, to decide on matters concerning Denmark and Greenland,” the statement read.

The statement added that Arctic security remains a “key priority” for Europe and is critical for international and transatlantic security.

Venezuela raid was ‘shameful American imperialism’

A former CIA director has warned that President Trump is putting Nato at risk and predicted he will not stop at Venezuela.

John Brennan, who has long been critical of Trump, told Times Radio that the Venezuela intervention was “a shameful exhibition of American imperialism under the Trump administration”.

John Brennan

John Brennan

DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES

Brennan, who served as head of the CIA from 2013 to 2017 under Barack Obama, said that Trump’s actions could lead its allies, including Ukraine, to question the value of the US commitment to Nato.

“Donald Trump is somebody who is very mercurial,” he said. “He goes back on his word. And I don’t think you can trust what he says. He’s going to do what he wants, when he wants, and the way he wants.”

Brennan added: “I think what we’re seeing now is a demonstration of the Trump administration’s imperialist agenda. And I don’t think it’s going to stop at Venezuela.

“The question is, what is next? When is it going to happen? And he’s already made some very public threats against Colombia … Mexico and Cuba, Iran and then Greenland, a Nato partner. It’s just outrageous to think that we are threatening Denmark in terms of taking over Greenland.”

Security forces deployed on streets of Caracas
Diosdado Cabello and armed men in Caracas

Diosdado Cabello and armed men in Caracas

Armed police were deployed on the streets of Caracas overnight, according to the Venezuelan minister of the interior, justice and peace.

Diosdado Cabello posted photos of himself to social media surrounded by security forces holding automatic weapons.

A caption says that he visited several areas on Monday evening to oversee the deployment of security forces.

The former vice-president and spy chief had been a key ally of Maduro and is accused of high-level involvement in alleged corruption and drug trafficking by the Venezuelan opposition and the US.

Cost of Venezuelan oil may surprise Trump

Hours after removing Nicolás Maduro from power in Venezuela by abducting him from Caracas, President Trump vowed that America’s oil giants would invest “billions” in a revival of the resource-rich nation’s beleaguered energy industry.

However, industry observers are sceptical about the feasibility of attracting US oil majors back to Venezuela more than a decade after all but one abandoned it.

Read in full: Trump wants to pump more Venezuelan oil. The cost may surprise him

“There are a few very important problems here,” said Jorge León, head of geopolitical analysis at Rystad Energy and a former official at the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec). “The first one is underinvestment in infrastructure: the national oil company is completely broken, they have not invested at all. [There is] a lot of corruption … so you really need to fix the infrastructure and that is quite expensive.”

US raid sent dangerous message, UN warns
A protest against the US in Brazil on Monday

A protest against the US in Brazil on Monday

TUANE FERNANDES/REUTERS

The United Nations human rights office voiced deep concern Tuesday over the dramatic US operation in Venezuela, warning that it clearly “undermined a fundamental principle of international law”.

“States must not threaten or use force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state,” Ravina Shamdasani, spokeswoman for the UN rights office, told reporters in Geneva.

The office added that the US intervention sent a message to the world that the powerful can so whatever they like.

Denmark ‘can count on European solidarity’

Denmark can count on the solidarity of all of of Europe on the issue of Greenland, a Danish territory, the Polish prime minister has said, after President Trump reiterated that he wanted to take over the Arctic island.

“No member should attack or threaten another member of the North Atlantic Treaty. Otherwise, Nato would lose its meaning if conflict or mutual conflicts occurred within the alliance,” Donald Tusk said.

Denmark can count on European solidarity over Greenland, Polish PM says

Who is Delcy Rodríguez, the new Venezuelan leader?
Delcy Rodríguez is sworn in as Venezuelan president in Caracas on Monday, as Nicolas Maduro Guerra, the son of the seized former president looks on

Delcy Rodríguez is sworn in as Venezuelan president in Caracas on Monday, as Nicolas Maduro Guerra, the son of the seized former president looks on

REUTERS

Her father was a Marxist guerrilla who kidnapped an American businessman. She calls herself a revolutionary and is sanctioned by the United States for repressing dissent.

She runs the national oil company in a country that has more of the black stuff than Saudi Arabia.

And now she seems to have been picked by President Trump as a “gracious” woman with whom he can do business.

Read in full: Who is Delcy Rodríguez? Guerrilla’s daughter is new Venezuela leader

Leaders meet in Paris amid US tension
The prime minister of Canada, Mark Carney, is greeted by President Macron

The prime minister of Canada, Mark Carney, is greeted by President Macron

ABACA PRESS/ALAMY LIVE NEWS

European leaders and senior American officials are to meet in Paris today to discuss Ukrainian security amid transatlantic tensions over US threats to annex Greenland.

Mette Frederiksen, the prime minister of Denmark, is expected to attend the “coalition of the willing” meeting, as are the senior US negotiators Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

The meeting of about 30 of Ukraine’s allies will seek to agree on concrete commitments to a multinational peacekeeping force to be deployed in the event of a ceasefire.

However, President Trump’s calls for Greenland to come under US control will also be discussed on the sidelines of the meeting.

Mark Carney, prime minister of Canada — another country that Trump has laid claim to — said he would have a bilateral meeting with Frederiksen in Paris.

Strongman Maduro dressed down by Manhattan judge

A minute before noon a tall, broad-shouldered defendant with a bushy moustache and a curly rug of greying hair walked into room 26a on the 26th floor of the Manhattan federal courthouse. The courtroom is ruled by Judge Alvin Hellerstein, 92, a lifelong New Yorker.

“Are you, sir, Nicolás Maduro Moros?” Judge Hellerstein inquired.

Read in full: Wearing prison garb, strongman Maduro is dressed down by a Manhattan judge

“I am president of the Republic of Venezuela and I’m here, kidnapped, since January 3,” the defendant replied, in Spanish. “I was captured at my home in Caracas, Venezuela, in —”

“Here, let me interfere,” said Judge Hellerstein, cutting him off. “There will be a time and a place to go into all of this. The counsel will be able to make motions addressing the legal sufficiency of what was done.”

Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, in custody with DEA agents.

Maduro in handcuffs after being brought to the US

RON SACHS/CNP/SPLASH

The rise and fall of Maduro — how Venezuela’s president lost control

US already operates Greenland military base
Pituffik Space Base

Pituffik Space Base

THOMAS TRAASDAHL/RITZAU SCANPIX/AP

The Trump administration claims it needs Greenland for strategic defence purposes despite the US already having a military presence on the island.

The US operates Pituffik Space Base on the northwest coast of Greenland under an agreement with Denmark.

The base is 750 miles north of the Arctic Circle and 947 miles from the North Pole. Formally Thule Air Base, it hosts 150 US service members — down from nearly 6,000 during the Cold War.

The 1951 Greenland Defence Agreement allows the US to operate the base under a Nato framework, as long as both Denmark and the US remain members.

In March last year, the US vice-president, JD Vance, toured the installation. In April, the base commander, Colonel Susannah Meyers, was relieved of command by the Trump administration for “undermining” Vance’s visit.

Other countries in Trump’s sights

The intervention in Venezuela has heightened concerns the US may take military action against other countries.

Colombia: President Trump says “Colombia is very sick”. Asked whether the US would intervene in Colombia, Trump responded: “Sounds good to me.”

Could the US now turn its attention to Colombia and Cuba?

Mexico: Shortly after the Maduro capture, Trump said: “Something’s going to have to be done with Mexico.” He has offered to send US troops to help fight cartels, an offer Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, has rejected.

Cuba: Trump called Cuba a “failing nation”.

Iran: Amid protests in Iran, Trump said if Tehran “violently kills peaceful protesters … the United States of America will come to their rescue”.

Canada: Last year Trump expressed a desire to make Canada the 51st US state.

Panama: Trump has said he wants to “take back” the Panama Canal.

Nigeria: The US launched strikes against what Trump has called Islamic State militant “scum” over Christmas.

Machado to return to Venezuela ‘as soon as possible’

The international figurehead of the Venezuelan opposition, María Corina Machado, plans to return home “as soon as possible”.

In her first public interview since the US military forcibly removed President Maduro from power, the Nobel peace prize winner vowed to return to her country.

“I’m planning to go back to Venezuela as soon as possible,” Machado told Sean Hannity, the Fox News broadcaster.

Read in full: María Corina Machado to return to Venezuela ‘as soon as possible’

Tankers ‘turn off GPS to evade US sanctions’
Several ships could be seen heading north from Venezuela in a satellite image from the European Copernicus programme. They appear to have left port without the interim government’s authorisation

Several ships could be seen heading north from Venezuela in a satellite image from the European Copernicus programme. They appear to have left port without the interim government’s authorisation

At least 16 sanctioned oil tankers appear to have made an attempt to evade US sanctions, leaving Venezuelan waters since its forces captured Nicolás Maduro on Saturday.

Most of the oil tankers that left Venezuela in the past days have transmitted false GPS location signals, disguising their true locations, or cut off transmissions entirely.

Thirteen of the tankers were carrying around 12 million barrels of crude oil and refined oil products, according to Tanker Trackers.

The US blockade could affect up to 600 oil tankers, according to an AFP analysis of data provided by the US Office of Foreign Assets Control and the International Maritime Organisation.

Venezuelans brace for future: ‘Now there is fear’
Armed groups monitoring commercial activity at a market in Caracas, Venezuela.

People have been queueing outside grocery shops in Caracas amid fears of shortages

BORIS VERGAR/GETTY IMAGES

From Miami to Melbourne and Bogota to Buenos Aires, thousands of Venezuelan migrants have been celebrating the demise of Nicolás Maduro. On the streets of Caracas the mood is far quieter.

The two million residents of the capital, who are famously loquacious, have been largely keeping their heads down in the two days since they were awoken by the sound of US missile attacks and the news that their unpopular president was gone.

Read in full: Venezuelans brace for what comes next: ‘Now there is fear’

Their reticence is understandable. Venezuela is under a state of emergency, imposed months before Saturday’s attack, making it clear that supporting any US intervention would be deemed treason. On Monday an additional clause was introduced calling on security forces to search for and arrest anyone involved in facilitating the operation that captured Maduro.

Machado: I want to share Nobel prize with Trump
Maria Corina Machado beat President Trump to the Nobel Peace Prize

Maria Corina Machado beat President Trump to the Nobel Peace Prize

HEIKO JUNGE/EPA

The Venezuelan opposition leader, María Corina Machado, says she plans to share her Nobel peace prize with President Trump.

In her first public interview since the US military forcibly removed Nicolás Maduro from power, she told Fox News: “Because this is the prize of the Venezuelan people, certainly we want to give it to him and share it with him.”

However, Machado, who said she wants to return to her country as soon as possible, appears to have been sidelined by the US after the removal of Maduro, with Trump seeming to dismiss the option of involving her in the political transition.

Machado: I’ll return home as soon as possible

He said it would be “tough” for Machado to lead the nation because she did not have the “respect within or the support within the country”.

Machado said that her ally Edmundo González, a former diplomat who is widely believed to have defeated Maduro in an election in July 2024, should “immediately assume his constitutional mandate” as president.

The US has said it will run Venezuela for now

The US has said it will run Venezuela for now

FABIO TEIXEIRA/ANADOLU VIA GETTY IMAGES

Streeting: Rules-based system is disintegrating

Wes Streeting said that the events in Venezuela were “just the latest morbid symptoms of the disintegration of the rules-based international system”.

The health secretary told Times Radio: “That concerns us as a government, and should concern all of us, because a world without rules is a world in which we are all less safe.”

Streeting defended Sir Keir Starmer and Yvette Cooper for not criticising the Trump administration over alleged breaches of international law in Venezuela.

“They are choosing their words and their timing carefully because they are not commentators,” he said.

Streeting on Times Radio on Tuesday

Greenland ‘already part of the team’
Wes Streeting

Wes Streeting

PAUL EDWARDS

Wes Streeting has said that “Greenland is already part of our team” after President Trump threatened to annex the territory for national security reasons.

“They are part of the Kingdom of Denmark, and they are playing their part,” the health secretary told Times Radio.

“They are playing their part for our national security and national self-interest and for the contribution to our collective security through Nato.

“So I’d say to President Trump, Greenland is already part of our team. They are already delivering with and for Nato, and they are doing that very well as part of the kingdom of Denmark.”

Tories play up US commitment to Nato

The shadow defence secretary has sought to play up the US commitment to Nato, despite Trump’s threats to annex Greenland.

James Cartlidge told Times Radio that the “fundamental position” of the US is that it is an ally, and that Nato is “absolutely central to them as it is to us”.

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Cartlidge said that he backed Sir Keir Starmer’s defence of Denmark’s sovereignty over Greenland, but he added: “President Trump has a point in particular that he’s made many times that Nato countries need to spend more on defence, to do more to defend … our backyard, because the US has enough on its hands in terms of looking at the China threat.”

Miller: What right does Denmark have to Greenland?

In further comments during his CNN interview, Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff, questioned Denmark’s legitimacy to govern Greenland.

When asked by CNN’s Jake Tapper if he could rule out military action against Greenland, Miller said: “It wouldn’t be military action against Greenland. Greenland has a population of 30,000 people, Jake.

“The real question is: by what right does Denmark assert control over Greenland? What is the basis of their territorial claim? What is their basis of having Greenland as a colony of Denmark?”

Trump’s hardline border tsar ‘set for top role in Venezuela’

He added that “there is no need to think or even talk about” a military operation in Greenland.

Stephen Miller

Stephen Miller

KEVIN LAMARQUEREUTERS

Danish ambassador demands respect

The Danish ambassador to the US has responded after the wife of President Trump’s deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, posted a map of Greenland overlaid with an American flag with the caption “soon”.

Katie Miller, a former White House aide, posted the contentious image of the Danish autonomous territory in the colours of the US flag on her X feed on Saturday.

Jesper Møller Sørensen, the ambassador of Denmark to the US, said: “Just a friendly reminder about the US and the Kingdom of Denmark: We are close allies and should continue to work together as such.”

He added: “We expect full respect for the territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Denmark.”

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Maduro and his wife in court on Monday

Maduro and his wife in court on Monday

JANE ROSENBERG/REUTERS

Nicolás Maduro claimed to be a “prisoner of war” who was “kidnapped” by America during his first court appearance on Monday since being arrested in Venezuela on Saturday.

“I am a decent man, president of my country,” Maduro declared as he and his wife, Cilia Flores, entered not guilty pleas on drug-trafficking and weapons charges. The couple were then returned to jail.

I’m a prisoner of war, defiant Nicolás Maduro tells US court

The UN held an emergency meeting of its security council. The US ambassador said his country was not at war with Venezuela and that the raid was a law enforcement operation. The UN heard criticism of the US from several countries including China and Russia.

Protesters gather at New York courthouse

In the UK, Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, said the British government would “shed no tears” for the end of Maduro’s rule and that she had raised the importance of international law with her US counterpart, Marco Rubio. She told MPs it was for the Trump administration to set out the legal basis for the raid.

Greenland is not for sale, PM says
Jens-Frederik Nielsen

Jens-Frederik Nielsen

OSCAR SCOTT CARL/RITZAU SCANPIX/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The Greenland prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, has looked to calm fears among the Arctic island’s residents.

“We are not in a situation where we think that there might be a takeover of the country overnight, and that is why we are insisting that we want good co-operation,” he told a news conference on Monday.

“The situation is not such that the United States can simply conquer Greenland,” Nielsen added.
Nielsen also called a post by Katie Miller, the wife of Trump’s deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, showing Greenland in the colours of the American flag “disrespectful”.

“Relations between nations and peoples are built on mutual respect and international law — not on symbolic gestures that disregard our status and our rights,” he said on X.

But he added: “There is neither reason for panic nor for concern. Our country is not for sale, and our future is not decided by social media posts.”

Nato will collapse if US annexes Greenland, Danish PM warns
Mette Frederiksen with Sir Keir Starmer in Downing Street last February

Mette Frederiksen with Sir Keir Starmer in Downing Street last February

KIRSTY WIGGLESWORTH/PA

The Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, has warned that any move by the US to take over Greenland will result in the end of the Nato military alliance.

Frederiksen made the comments on Monday after President Trump told reporters on Sunday that he would “talk about Greenland in 20 days”.

The military operation to kidnap the Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife has caused alarm in Denmark and Greenland, which is a semi-autonomous territory of the Danish kingdom and thus part of Nato.

“If the United States chooses to attack another Nato country militarily, then everything stops,” Frederiksen said.

“That is, including our Nato and thus the security that has been provided since the end of the Second World War,” she told the Danish broadcaster TV2.

Greenland is a vast, sparsely populated Arctic territory

Greenland is a vast, sparsely populated Arctic territory

ALAMY

Greenland, the world’s largest island, is an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark that has its own language, flag and political institutions. Monetary, defence and foreign affairs fall under Danish control.

Norway ruled Greenland under an agreement with Norse settlers in 1261. It came under the union of Denmark, Sweden and Norway from 1397 to 1523 until Sweden departed, and finally fell under sole Danish sovereignty by the Treaty of Kiel of 1814.

Greenland’s colonial status ended with the Danish constitution of 1953, although it remained within the Kingdom of Denmark. The Home Rule Act of 1979 gave Greenland’s legislature more autonomy and in 1985 it left the European Economic Community, the forerunner of the EU. Greenland gained self-rule in 2009 but continues to receive an annual grant from Denmark. Its citizens retain EU as well as Danish citizenship as an overseas territory of the EU.

Trump: I’m very serious about Greenland

In fresh comments, President Trump said he is “very serious” about annexing Greenland.

Talking to the US broadcaster NBC, Trump reiterated his belief that the US has a claim to the semi-autonomous Danish territory. “We need Greenland for national security, and that includes Europe.”

Trump added that despite alarm among European countries over US claims to Greenland, he was “very loyal” to Europe. “You know, I’m very loyal to Europe. We need [it] for national security, right now.”

Katie Miller, the wife of Stephen Miller, Donald Trump’s powerful deputy chief of staff for policy, posted this image on on X with the caption: “Soon”

Katie Miller, the wife of Stephen Miller, Donald Trump’s powerful deputy chief of staff for policy, posted this image on on X with the caption: “Soon”

Starmer ‘very careful’ what he says to the US

Sir Keir Starmer chooses what to say to the United States “very carefully” to use his influence in a way that works in the UK’s national interest, a cabinet minister has said.

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, said the prime minister was attempting to shore up “the rules-based system, which we’ve seen disintegrating before our eyes”.

On Monday, a junior minister refused to say if the government would criticise President Trump if he attempted to annex Greenland.

Starmer said on Monday, in response to Trump’s threats: “Greenland and the Kingdom of Denmark are to decide the future of Greenland, and only Greenland and the Kingdom of Denmark.”

Not the time to destabilise Nato, Streeting says
A protest against the US in Copenhagen last March

A protest against the US in Copenhagen last March

NILS MEILVANG/RITZAU SCANPIX/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Wes Streeting said that “this is not the time to destabilise Nato” in response to threats by the Trump administration against Greenland — which is part of Denmark, a member of the alliance.

The health secretary said: “The UK and Nato members are doubling down on support for Greenland, their right to self-determination, their place as part of the Kingdom of Denmark and the role that they are already playing as part of the Nato alliance.

“The good news for President Trump is that Greenland is already part of the team and is playing its part in defending our national security as the UK and our collective security.”

He added: “At a time when we can see the security of Nato members and the alliance at threat, particularly from Russia, but also from our other adversaries, this is not the time to destabilise Nato and to undermine our collective security.

“We’re really clear about where we stand. We’re really clear with the United States about where we stand on Greenland.”

Greenland ‘belongs to the US’

One of President Trump’s top aides, Stephen Miller, has said that Greenland rightfully belongs to the United States and that no country can stop America from annexing the Danish territory.

In explicit remarks, Miller also told CNN that the world is “governed by strength”.

“Nobody’s going to fight the United States militarily over the future of Greenland,” Miller said, after being asked repeatedly whether he would rule out using military force.

He added: “We live in a world, in the real world … that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power,” he said. “These are the iron laws of the world since the beginning of time.”

The comments come at a time of growing alarm in European capitals over Washington’s with regards to Greenland.

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