WSJ What’s News - Can NATO Troops in Greenland Keep Trump at Bay?

Episode Date: January 15, 2026

A.M. Edition for Jan. 15. Denmark and several NATO allies are sending troops for military exercises in Greenland, a day after unsuccessful efforts by Danish and Greenlandic officials to persuade Presi...dent Trump to abandon his pursuit of the island. Plus, Trump appears to roll back threats of an imminent attack on Iran. And Journal special writer Gregory Zuckerman discusses the White House’s decision to put Wall Street on the defensive as a part of its midterm-elections push on affordability. Luke Vargas hosts.  Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Corporate megastores are spending millions lobbying DC politicians on one-sided policies that send small businesses tumbling. They want to enact harmful credit card mandates that take resources away from your local credit union and community bank, leaving Main Street businesses with less access to credit, making it harder for your family to pay for everyday goods like gas and groceries. Tell Congress to guard your card and oppose the Durban Marshall credit card mandates. paid for by Electronic Payments Coalition. European troops head to Greenland,
Starting point is 00:00:35 hoping to tell Washington to take the island, you'll have to get past us. It's clear that the president has this wish of conquering over Greenland. We made it very, very clear that this is not in the interest of the kingdom. Plus, President Trump appears to roll back threats of an imminent attack on Iran, and relentless AI demand boosts.
Starting point is 00:00:58 shipmaker TSM to New Heights. It's Thursday, January 15th. I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories, moving your world today. Denmark and NATO allies, Sweden, France, and Germany are sending troops for military exercises in Greenland, a day after unsuccessful efforts by Danish and Greenlandic officials to persuade President Trump to abandon his pursuit of the island. And there could be more deployments to come, with Germany saying its reconnaissance forces would be assessing possible future military contributions. Here's our Brussels Bureau Chief, Daniel Michaels. This is the first move of what is likely to be several exercises, deployments, repositionings of forces on and around
Starting point is 00:01:47 Greenland to signal to the White House that Europe is serious about Arctic security. At the same time, these deployments are also assigned to Trump that if you want to take Greenland, you're going to have to deal with our soldiers on Greenland, and you will be getting in a conflict with your NATO allies. Trump has argued that the U.S. needs Greenland for national security purposes, saying Denmark isn't doing enough to protect the island from China and Russia. That argument doesn't hold water in Europe. In fact, the Danish and Greenlandic officials in Washington yesterday said that, essentially there are no Chinese ships near Greenland. In fact, they see them at the other end of the Arctic near Alaska. So the troops that are moving to Greenland are really moving there as a sign to Trump and not because of an immediate security threat to Greenland itself from potential adversaries outside NATO.
Starting point is 00:02:44 French President Emmanuel Macron convened an emergency meeting this morning to look at how to handle the situation. But Dan said the limited military resources available in Europe mean there, are few good options. Europeans just don't have that many forces available at their disposal, especially forces that are ready for very harsh Arctic conditions in Greenland. And it may well be that there aren't even places to put them in Greenland. So they do have to think about basic logistics issues like that. And these conversations are probably happening very quickly, even though Trump has expressed
Starting point is 00:03:18 interest in Greenland since 2019. It's really only been since the U.S. military action to grab. Venezuela's leader Nicholas Maduro, that Greenland has really come back into focus and in a more serious way. Meanwhile, President Trump appears to be backing off threats of an imminent attack on Iran. After previously stating that help is on its way, Trump told reporters yesterday that Iran had stopped killing protesters. I thought we're going to watch it and see what the process is, but we were given a very good statement by people that are aware of what's going on.
Starting point is 00:03:52 When they say no executions, everyone is talking about, a lot of executions were taking place today. We were just all no executions. I hope that's true. That's a big thing, yes. Iran briefly closed its airspace overnight, a step it took during fighting with Israel last year, though it has since been reopened. Should Trump decide to authorize an attack, his options could be reigned in by his redeployment of forces to the Caribbean, which has left the U.S. without an aircraft carrier strike group in the Middle East. We will see how long that Caribbean deployment lasts after the Trump administration yesterday assured lawmakers that it had no plans to send ground troops into or occupy Venezuela. That promise convinced a pair of Republican senators to back off their support for a bill aimed at limiting President Trump's war powers, leaving Vice President J.D. Vance to break a tie in favor of the White House. Meanwhile, Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Karina Machado is due to meet Trump at the White House today.
Starting point is 00:04:53 Machado, who won last year's Nobel Peace Prize, had positioned herself as an ideological ally of Trump, only for the U.S. to embrace Venezuelan Vice President and Maduro loyalist Delci Rodriguez. In Minneapolis, residents clashed with law enforcement last night after a federal immigration agent shot and injured a Venezuelan immigrant. The Department of Homeland Security said the man fled a traffic stop before crashing his car and fleeing on foot, which led to a struggle with an officer. He was then shot in the leg and later taken to a hospital. In a statement, DHS said the man came to the U.S. in 2022 and was in the country illegally. And California's Attorney General is investigating Elon Musk's AI chatbot GROC over deepfakes. XAI is being probed by authorities around the world following controversy over GROC's ability to generate sexual imagery of women and children. The company says it's now actively blocking the chatbot from undressing images,
Starting point is 00:05:53 of real people where it's illegal. Turning to markets, there are signs of growth in Europe. Germany's economy has expanded for the first time since 2022, thanks to huge investments into defense and infrastructure projects. Similarly, car manufacturers boosted UK GDP, which grew more than expected in November. On the earnings front, Nvidia and Apple's relentless demand for AI chips boosted TSMC to record profits in 2025.
Starting point is 00:06:23 The results are a relief for investors concerned about the cost of bringing semiconductor production to American soil, as the world's largest contract chipmaker looks to mitigate the impact of U.S. tariffs. And it's another big day for banks, with Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley releasing their Q4 results before the U.S. market open. Coming up as part of an affordability push ahead of the midterms, President Trump is promising to cut credit card rates, stock buybacks, and executive pay. Now, Wall Street is on the defensive. That's after the break. As companies seek to close growing gaps in skills and talent, Deloitte U.S. CEO Jason Garzadas believes it's important for organizations to understand their baseline of skills.
Starting point is 00:07:08 There's so many organizations that can't ask and answer the fundamental questions about how much computer science or data management skills do I have or AI development skills in a given domain. By performing a skills inventory, leaders can truly understand where their efforts should be focused. Being blind to those gaps is the real miss. Visit Deloitte.com to learn how your enterprise can help successfully cultivate talent. There's a new theme emerging in 26, the White House putting Wall Street on the defensive. It's a common thread the journal's Gregory Zuckerman says ties together a slate of President Trump's recent actions aimed at lowering prices, including calling for a cap on credit card interest rates, restricting stock buybacks for defense firms and home builders, and pushing tech companies
Starting point is 00:07:57 to pick up the tab on higher electricity prices. Greg, were we expecting this? Well, the writing was on the wall. Many investors sort of ignored it, but they have warned us. The administration has been saying for over a year that they're going to pivot to some extent from Wall Street to Main Street,
Starting point is 00:08:13 meaning that they're going to enact or embrace or try to embrace policies that could potentially help in terms of affordability, all kinds of other measures, maybe helping the average person. So they have been telegraphing it to some extent. But, yeah, investors have sort of ignored those warning signs. All right, ignoring the warning signs.
Starting point is 00:08:32 We are very much now getting the actions that had been teased there. And do we think there's more coming? Yeah, there is a sense that this is the beginning of an effort. And part of it is because midterm elections are ahead this year. So the president and the administration are conscious of the polling numbers, which don't look tremendous. And not so rosy for the Republicans. and the concern among many Americans is this affordability issue.
Starting point is 00:08:59 It's a really unusual phenomenon in that the president has become something of an adversary to investors to Wall Street rather than an ally. And there are specific sectors and stocks that have been under pressure as a result of these policy initiatives. But the overall market is saying, well, let's see if they're actually enacted. And the overall economy is pretty strong. profits keep growing. All right. So some sectors may be seeing a bit of a share price dip, and yet the overall hit to shareholders, Greg, so far seems a bit contained. And then, of course,
Starting point is 00:09:35 we need to see if there's follow-through on the threats that Trump has been making very much unknown at this point. Well, investors are conscious of the fact that every initiative introduced doesn't necessarily become law, especially under this administration. Last year, we saw specifically a lot of the tariffs gave us jitters, gave us. Gidders, gave everybody jitters, gave investors jitters, and said the market plummeting, and yet there was a rollback, especially when markets reacted, stocks and bonds. So investors at this point need actual proof evidence that these are actually going to be enacted. And you need congressional approval some of the times. And it's also the case that there are reasons to think that the administration may have
Starting point is 00:10:20 second thoughts and specifically about credit cards on the face of it. Restricting the rates that people are charged to 10 percent. Seems like a good policy. Seems like it's something that's doing people of favor. But if it results in credit card companies restricting the credit that they provide to, let's say, bowers with scuffed credit with poor credit histories and such, if they can't charge them 15, 16 plus percentage rates, if they can only charge, them 10%, well, then maybe they won't give them credit cards anymore. They won't allow them to borrow. And that in turn may mean the administration may think twice about these policies. Yeah, really intriguing electoral case study here, right, whether voters really align with
Starting point is 00:11:06 Main Street or Wall Street. Yeah, there's a consensus, I think, among both parties that too much of the wealth has been concentrated and too few in this country. And there should be more efforts to help Main Street America. And yet, when you roll up your sleeves and you try to do that in enact policy, it becomes quite tricky, as we're saying. I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal's special writer Gregory Zuckerman. Greg, thank you so much. Oh, great to be here. And that's it for what's news for this Thursday morning. Today's show was produced by Hattie Moyer and Daniel Bach. Our supervising producer was Sandra Kilhoff, and I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal. We will be back tonight with the new show. And until then, thanks for listening.
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