• @[email protected]
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      41 day ago

      That doesn’t mean that they’re not Danish territory, and Denmark is a member state, and the defence clause gets activated when the territory of a member state is under attack.

      Differently put: The only reason that Argentinia didn’t find itself at war with the whole of the EU was because the defence clause wasn’t yet law during the Falklands war. NATO’s clause only applies on the northern hemisphere if I’m recalling it right, there’s definitely a geographical limit.

      • poVoqM
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        72 days ago

        Something like that yes, but I doubt this extends to Greenland being included in other EU defense treaties.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 day ago

        It’d be even more if we ever got around to reforming the Common Fisheries Policy to make sense. Same goes for Iceland and the Faroer.

        • @CAVOKOP
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          21 day ago

          Not really familiar with the CFP on that level. In what way doesn’t it make sense?

          • @[email protected]
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            11 day ago

            If Austria wants to fish in Danish waters, they can do so, freely. If Denmark wants to fell Austrian trees or mine Austrian mountains, they can’t.

            Then, aside from that, the quotas are insane: We’re constantly scraping the bottom of the barrel, barely preventing fish from dying out. Allowing stocks to recover even a bit would allow us to pull more out of the waters while simultaneously having the stocks recover even more and increase quotas again until fish again are the abundant resource they once were before literal centuries of overfishing. Would take a couple of years, maybe a handful, of reduced quotas to a complete moratorium, depending on area and species. It’s a thing we can absolutely afford to do: Some reduction in consumption, some increase in imports, some money spent on mothballing ships and people’s jobs for a while, gigantic payoff.