Donald Trump will not be able to force Greenland to change ownership, a former top adviser to the US president has told the BBC.


IBM's vice chairman Gary Cohn, who advised Trump on the economy in his first term, said Greenland will stay Greenland and linked the need for access to critical minerals to his former boss's plans for the territory.


Cohn is one of America's top tech bosses, a leader in the race to develop AI and quantum computing, and served under Trump as director of the White House National Economic Council.


In a sign of how seriously business leaders are taking the crisis, he warned invading an independent country that is part of Nato would be over the edge.


He also suggested the president's recent comments about Greenland may be part of a negotiation.


I just came from a US congressional delegation meeting, and I think there's pretty uniform consensus with both Republicans and Democrats that Greenland will stay Greenland, he said.


Greenland would be happy for the US to increase its military presence on the island, he said, with the North Atlantic and Arctic Ocean becoming much more of a military threat.


The US could also negotiate an offtake agreement for Greenland's vast yet largely untapped supplies of rare earth minerals, Cohn suggested.


But I think, you know, invading a country that doesn't want to be invaded – that's part of a militaristic alliance, Nato – seems to me to be a little bit over the edge at this point, he said.


Cohn indicated the president may be overstating his demands as part of a negotiating tactic – something he says the president has done successfully in the past.


You've got to give Donald Trump some credit for the successes he's had and he's many times tried to overreach to get something in a compromise situation, he said.


He has overreached in advertising something to end up getting what he actually wants. Maybe what he actually wants is a larger military presence and an offtake.


The start of this year's World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos has been overshadowed by the president's increasingly aggressive stance on the arctic territory, with many political and business leaders alarmed about the potential geopolitical and economic impact. Trump is due to address delegates at the gathering on Wednesday.


While Cohn expressed reservations about some of the president's actions, he said the US administration had various different motives for what they were doing.


He said Trump's decision to intervene in Venezuela was a path to disrupt the country's relationship with China, the biggest market for its oil, as well as Russia and Cuba.


Cohn also thinks that the president has become increasingly focused on the importance of rare earth minerals, noting that Greenland has quite a supply of the resources.


Those minerals are critical to the development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and quantum computing – also a major talking point in Davos.


US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday hit back at claims Trump has blamed his escalating threats over Greenland on the fact he was not awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.


In a message to Norway's Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, Trump blamed the country for not giving him the prize and said he no longer feels obliged to think only of peace.


Bessent said: I don't know anything about the president's letter to Norway, and I think it's complete canard that the President will be doing this because of the Nobel Prize.


The president is looking at Greenland as a strategic asset for the United States. We are not going to outsource our hemispheric security to anyone else.


Developments in quantum computing and AI are seen as critical not just for the US economy and productivity, but for US strategic influence in the world.


IBM is dead centre in what's going on in quantum today. We have the largest amount of quantum computers in use today Cohn said, highlighting that his company has put many of these computers into use across America in firms from the banking industry to medicine.


AI is going to be the backbone for data that feeds into quantum to solve problems we've never been able to solve, he added.


Where we're heading is AI is going to be part of everyone's enterprise. AI and quantum are going to be working in the enterprise behind the scenes to make every company more efficient. And we're just at the beginning of that sort of long road, and that's going to take probably another three to five years to get there.


Earlier this month, Google, also a US company, told the BBC it had the world's best-performing quantum computer. The race to develop the technology is the other key talking point – apart from Greenland – at the World Economic Forum.