Trump claims Greenland deal “forever” while Denmark and Greenland say nothing was negotiated and no document exists.

Trump just closed a deal on Greenland.

With someone who doesn’t own Greenland.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte sat across from Trump in Davos.

NATO doesn’t own Greenland. Denmark does.

Denmark wasn’t in the room.

Greenland wasn’t in the room.

When reporters asked Greenland’s Prime Minister what’s in the “framework deal” about his own country, he said:

“I don’t know what there is in the agreement, or the deal about my country.”

Read that again.

The leader of the territory being “dealt” doesn’t know what the deal says.

NATO’s official spokesperson confirmed Rutte “did not propose any compromise to sovereignty.”

Danish PM Frederiksen: “We cannot negotiate on our sovereignty.”

There is no written document.

Nothing signed.

No terms agreed.

Trump told Fox the deal lasts “forever.”

Forever on what paper?

Signed by whom?

Meanwhile, Critical Metals stock is up 158% this month.

The Tanbreez mine won’t hit 85,000 tonnes annual production until late 2026 at earliest.

Total development cost: $290 million.

80% of Greenland is covered in ice.

Arctic extraction runs 5-10x the cost of mining anywhere else on Earth.

One researcher called the plan “completely bonkers” and said you might as well mine on the moon.

But the stock keeps climbing.

Because the headline says “deal.”

Here’s what actually happened:

The 1951 Defense Agreement already gives America the right to build bases, move military assets, and operate freely across Greenland’s defense areas.

In perpetuity.

Trump negotiated enhanced access to something America already has access to.

This is like announcing you’ve secured “total access” to a gym you’ve had a membership to since 1951.

The pattern:

Threaten the impossible.

Create crisis.

Accept what was always available.

Declare unprecedented victory.

Watch the stocks move.

Repeat.

Kill conditions to monitor:

No signed agreement by Q2 2026 = thesis confirmed.

Sovereignty concessions from Denmark = thesis dead.

CRML production delays beyond Q4 2026 = 20% correction incoming.

The Arctic isn’t going anywhere.

Neither is Danish sovereignty.

But the narrative already moved on.

That’s the deal.