Canada “lives because of the United States.” The words stunned the Davos hall. In a blistering speech,
Donald Trump tore into Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney,
slammed Europe as “unrecognizable,” and openly questioned NATO’s future.
Macron walked out. Denmark was shamed over Greenland.
Allies watched, wondering if the West itself was brea… Continues…
Trump’s broadside in Davos was more than a moment of personal pique;
it was a declaration of a reordered Western alliance on his terms.
By telling Canada to “remember” who keeps it alive
, and accusing Europe of losing its identity, he turned a global economic forum into a trial of his closest partners.
Carney’s warning that the old order was a “useful fiction”
collided head‑on with Trump’s grievance that America pays, others benefit, and nobody says thank you.
Macron’s early exit and Denmark’s dressing‑down
over Greenland underlined how raw the rift has become.
Trump cast tariffs, energy, migration, and defense spending as loyalty tests,
insisting a “strong and united West”
now depends on allies accepting his transactional vision.
Behind the applause and icy stares in Davos,
one question lingered: is this a
temporary rupture—or the new, permanent shape of the West?