Americas, Europe

Tariffs 'not right way to resolve differences within alliance': British premier

'Trade war is in nobody's interest and my job is always to act in UK's national interest,' says Keir Starmer regarding US threats to impose tariffs on nations opposing US control of Greenland

Aysu Bicer  | 19.01.2026 - Update : 19.01.2026
Tariffs 'not right way to resolve differences within alliance': British premier

LONDON

The British prime minister said on Monday the US plan to impose tariffs on the UK and other countries "is not the right way to resolve differences within an alliance, nor is it helpful to frame efforts to strengthen Greenland security as a justification for economic pressure."

On Saturday, US President Donald Trump said he would impose 10% tariffs on the UK, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Finland by Feb.1, with the tariffs rising to 25% by June 1, for their opposition to US control of Greenland and sending military personnel to the autonomous Danish territory.

European countries have denounced the US threat, reaffirming their commitment to Arctic security.

Keir Starmer, addressing a press conference at 10 Downing Street, ruled out retaliatory tariffs on the US, saying "a trade war is in nobody's interest and my job is always to act in the UK's national interest."

"Security of Greenland matters, and it will matter more as climate change reshapes the Arctic, as sea routes open and strategic competition intensifies," warned Starmer.

"The High North will require greater attention, greater investment, and stronger collective defense. The US will be central to that effort, and the UK stands ready to contribute fully alongside our allies through NATO,” he added.

He said he is determined to keep that relationship “strong, constructive and focused on results.”

He reiterated that the decision about Greenland’s future “belongs to the people of Greenland and the Kingdom of Denmark alone.”


Starmer rules out retaliatory tariffs against US

The world has become “markedly more turbulent in recent weeks," he said but he did not consider Trump was genuinely considering taking military action in the Arctic territory.

“I think that this can be resolved, and should be resolved, through calm discussion,” he said.

"Britain is a pragmatic country, we look for agreement, we believe in partnership.. We will work with our allies, in Europe, across NATO and with the US, we will keep dialogue open," he added.

Starmer ruled out imposing retaliatory tariffs on the US, saying they would be the “wrong thing to do.”

"I do emphasize, whatever the understandable reaction of the British public over the weekend, it is – on defense and security and intelligence and nuclear capability – manifestly in our interests to have a strong relationship with the US," he said.

"Strong, respectful alliances require the maturity to say where we disagree, and on this we disagree, and I’ve been clear about that, and I’ve spoken to the president about it will continue to do so."

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