Donald Trump’s concern about the strategic positioning of Greenland is rational. But the way the US president has approached the issue is not – and could still rupture NATO and cause enduring harm to North Atlantic political and economic relations.
The question for those attending the World Economic Forum in Davos all week has been how to respond to Trump’s ambition for the US to own Greenland by hook or by crook.
His speech on January 21 – which appeared to concede that the US will not take Greenland by force – and his subsequent claim of having negotiated what he referred to as a “framework agreement” with the Nato secretary-general, Mark Rutte, have at least given the assembled heads of state something to work with.
But America’s allies are faced with a series of options. They could try to wait out the 1,093 days left in Trump’s term in the hope that nothing drastic happens. They could appease Trump by conceding to some of his demands.
Or alternatively they could activate the economic “bazooka” threatened by the French president Emmanuel Macron – although this is now less likely due to Trump’s decision to row back back on his threat to impose additional sanctions on countries that opposed his Greenland plans.
Finally, they could try to actively resist US aggression towards Greenland. Although, thankfully, Trump appears to have backtracked – for now – on his threat to use force.
A key strategic location
The US president’s Davos speech pitched his interest in Greenland in strategic terms. The Pituffik space base (formerly Thule air base) is a prime location to monitor Russian and Chinese aerospace and maritime activities as well as being an early warning base for missile protection. This is increasingly important, given Russian military activity and stated claims to the polar region and China’s reference to the Arctic in its “Polar Silk Road” strategy.
In economic terms, Greenland’s melting ice has revealed the world’s eighth-largest deposits of rare earth elements and an estimated 31 billion barrels of oil. These are important to the US, which is seeking to reduce its dependency on China and to exert its own mineral and energy dominance. In the Davos speech, Trump emphasised US energy requirements while claiming not to covet Greenland’s mineral wealth.
Melting ice has similarly opened up Arctic shipping routes. This has made Greenland a strategic location both for influencing global trade and for projecting military power.
Trump has framed his desire to acquire Greenland in terms of his ambition to provide security for the West as a whole. Owning Greenland, he told the WEF, would allow him to build the “greatest Golden Dome ever built” – a missile defense shield which he claims would provide security for the whole world.
His speech revealingly framed his intentions towards Greenland in existential terms which also had echoes of his real estate origins. He said: “And all we’re asking for is to get Greenland, including right, title and ownership, because you need the ownership to defend it. You can’t defend it on a lease.”
This, of course, is wrong. Denmark has made it clear that the US is welcome to grow its military presence on the island, pointing out that during the cold war it had tens of thousands of troops stationed there.
Equally the US would be welcome to invest in mineral exploration and investment with Denmark’s blessing. And the fact is that Denmark cannot sell Greenland without the consent of the 57,000 Greenlandic people.
But in turning the whole thing into a raw power struggle, the situation has become akin to the 19th-century “Great Game” played out by the colonial powers.
Stephen Miller, a senior Trump advisor throughout his time in office, said recently that the world has always been ruled by “strength” and “power”, not the “niceties of international law.”
Trump has gone further, telling the New York Times in a two-hour interview published on January 11, “I don’t need international law”, and that he is only constrained by: “My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me, and that’s very good.”
An American world?
If it comes down to it, Europe will find it very hard to resist America. Europe is almost inextricably intertwined – economically and militarily – with the US.
A separation would have severe consequences, with military and intelligence capabilities compromised and access to modern computing and finance seriously curtailed. For the UK outside of the EU, since Brexit, the position is – if anything – even worse.
There is a dawning realization that the US might be Europe’s adversary, not ally. The Belgian prime minister, Bart De Wever, commented in a panel discussion at Davos that a “number of red lines are being crossed” by Trump and Europe now appeared to be facing the loss of its self-respect: “Being a happy vassal is one thing, being a miserable slave is something else. If you back down now you’re going to lose your dignity.”
Much is being made of the contrast between the US president’s speech on January 21 and the speech delivered by the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, the day before. Carney’s speech was hailed by many as being epoch-defining, in the words of one journalist on a par with Churchill’s Iron Curtain speech.
Carney talked of “a rupture in the world order, the end of a pleasant fiction and the beginning of a harsh reality.” The rules-based order, Carney said, was “fading” and that the multilateral institutions on which the world depended were under serious threat from great power dominance. It was now up to the rest of the world to stop pretending and face up to the new harsh reality.
It is in this context that America’s NATO partners need to decide whether Trump should be appeased or resisted. Once we know more about his mooted “framework” for the future of Greenland, that choice should become clearer.
Robert Dover is professor of intelligence and national security & dean of faculty, University of Hull
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The US is moving closer to civil war. Europe is moving closer to de industrializing. This is very exciting. And what is China doing? Building ai robots so the don’t have to work hard. 🤣🤣🤣
That’s good because the squnits aren’t breeding, so the robots will be serving Africans
A person with a tad of insight and intuition might even come to believe he knows exactly what he’s doing. Even as the dismantled moan and groan.
Look at all them European leaders lining up to visit Xi. Kiss the ring. Ben dover. You name it.
🤣🤣🤣🤣 Thanks Chump.
It was always the self enamored Anglo Saxons and Zionist zombies against the rest of us. The divide is now obvious even to “allies” of this pack. Look at the Kurds, Ukrainians and Europeans, dropped like a hot potato by their best “friend”. They will become more isolated, and hated.
Jealous or what !
No they are not, it’s still kiss the Trump ring
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thanks Chump. They should let Chump build a tower in China 🤣🤣🤣🤣. Maybe they can give one of VWs site in China to him.
And still the Eu goes on it’s hands and knees to the USA. Just not to China.
Maybe because they find Ch a bit ridiculous and small
That describes you, the phoney American, perfectly.
Canada 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
👆👆 Pedo alert
Even slope adults were not fully developed like other folks.
The rest of the world watched a bunch of Western thieves turning on each other, arguing with each other over AI without a Chinese perspective, NATO dealing with US without Denmark about Danish territory, presenting sociopathic images of Gaza waterfront properties resembling towers of Babel and Chump’s mini-me list of American lackey states where he declared himself forever emperor of the globe. And how can we forget that little FOOL in Kiev giving his regular sermon to Western goldfish memories. What a FARCE.
And this is the future the West is selling? No thank you.
American right wingers are as DUMB as the American Baizuo. The West reneged on globalization because the rest of the world began to benefit, so they became bitter and pulled away. That is where we are. Globalization will continue – just not for the West.
Those Christmases in Pakmanistan must be fun. At least you only have to buy 1 pressie your Dad/Uncle and Mom/Auntie
If you have nothing of substance to add, the wise decision would be to shut up. Rather than look like a fool.
You should take your own advice !
It could be a short era, bookmakers are quoting odds suggesting the House of Representatives will change hands at the mid-terms in November. Donald has to pull a white rabbit out of a top hat before then. Bringing Greenland into the fold is the obvious gambit. The inhabitants can be paid off easily, ten million dollars for every man, woman and child, would be the same money he offered Denmark.
When Biden came back he continued Trump’s policy re China.
Trump has effectively blown up the international order, UN, WEF, etc. Euro leaders can no longer hide behind ‘international rules’ and make decisions based on national interest – ie the voting public.
Trump may not be popular but it seems that most Euro’s want to see the back of their own leaders (Macron, Starmer etc) as well.
I would hesitate a little to predict the future.
Chump has blown up American credibility faster than any Russia, China, Iran or (insert bogeyman here) can ever dream of doing
The USA and Eu never had any credibility. US tore up the rule book that no one was following.
Yet you do, saying the squnits are going to overtake the USA
The number of useless comments you post is inversely proportional to your minuscule IQ.
Small banana Dave, the Tang Ping
Yes but, did campaign against it saying they were inflationary!
The only thing these two (Rep and Dem) can accomplish is to demonized the Chinese. Separately they are unable to do anything.