European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen proposed a five-part plan to mobilize €800 billion ($842 billion) for Europe’s defense and immediate military support to Ukraine after the US suspended military aid.
In recent weeks, dramatic diplomatic moves by the US—a NATO founding country—have failed to embrace those of its NATO allies. Instead, the US is pursuing closer ties to Russia, a political and military aggressor in Europe. Russia invaded Ukraine for the second time on February 24, 2022 and a war has been raging since.
Ursula von der Leyen’s initiative, “Rearm Europe“, has triggered anticipated interest by domain investors and other parties who dug into the keywords.
Already taken in various TLDs, the domain name RearmEurope.com leads the pack. Other TLDs registered include .eu and .org. The latter was registered before but dropped.
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Some actions and efforts by the US administration are helping build new businesses.
Defense of Europe and new realities for NATO build marketing possibilities. There’s also been excitement over Greenland. Domains such as GreenlandParty.com or GreenlandGoldRush.com offer outside leverage possibilities — they’re (presently) beyond the control of Denmark and proponents of the status quo.
@Joe – While Greenland domains can be everyone’s game, the country itself isn’t for sale. It’s actually insulting to the people of Greenland and its political and cultural motherland, Denmark, to witness this US administration’s imbecilic attempts to claim it can annex Greenland.
Keep on domaining!
Forced annexation is ugly. The USA did it to the Hawaiians in July 1898 by majority vote in the US Senate. Be assured many Hawaiian people resent continuing military occupation, with large swathes of land exclusively for military use.
Life seems to be tough for Greenland’s 60,000 people, but the future looks brighter. Here’s hoping they can successfully navigate developing turbulence. This isn’t their first exposure to big business: Google reportedly used the goo.gl domain hack for nearly 10 years (to 30 March 2019).