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The Danish Foreign Policy Society (in Danish: Det Udenrigspolitiske Selskab) [1] is a private, non-profit organisation founded in 1946 with the aim of promoting interest and raising awareness on foreign policy and international affairs in Denmark. His Royal Highness Crown Prince Frederik is the Patron of the Society.
Charlotte Flindt Pedersen (born 19 January 1965 in Aarhus, Denmark) is the Executive Director of the Danish Foreign Policy Society.. Charlotte Flindt Pedersen holds a M.A. degree in East-European studies from the University of Copenhagen (1994).
The foreign policy of Denmark is based on its identity as a sovereign state in Europe, the Arctic and the North Atlantic. As such its primary foreign policy focus is on its relations with other nations as a sovereign state compromising the three constituent countries: Denmark, Greenland and the Faroe Islands. Denmark has long had good relations ...
When President-elect Donald Trump mused about buying Greenland from Denmark during his first administration, the Danish prime minister called the idea “absurd” and rebuffed him outright.
He was the first foreign head of state to travel to the United States after Trump's victory and to meet the president-elect. [10] A right-wing libertarian economist, Milei had previously shown his fervent support for Donald Trump and his politics, wanting to strengthen diplomatic and economic ties between Argentina and the Western world.
She was appointed foreign editor at the newspaper Politiken in 1998, becoming the first female to hold that job at a major large nationwide newspaper in Denmark. [3] [4] Sperling left the job in 2000. [3] She was made a foreign employee and commentator at Politiken in 2003 and became a board member of The Danish Foreign Policy Society in 2010. [2]
Denmark will evacuate its citizens and holders of permanent residency in Denmark from Israel and occupied Palestinian territories on Friday at the earliest following the attack by Hamas, the ...
In the context of Danish political history, the doctrine can be seen as the official break with the isolationist "Spirit of 1864" international policy outlook. In 1864, Denmark lost Second war of Schleswig the last in a series of military defeats resulting in a loss of three quarters of its territory. The "Spirit of '64" can be summed up in the ...