Vance
Lands in Greenland, a Place That Doesn’t Want Him
Vice
President JD Vance’s trip to an island that President Trump wants to “get” is a
scaled-back version of the original White House plan. “He’s not welcome,” one
Greenlander said.
By Jeffrey
Gettleman and Maya Tekeli
Jeffrey
Gettleman reported from London, and Maya Tekeli from Nuuk, Greenland.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/28/world/europe/jd-vance-greenland-visit-denmark-us.html
March 28,
2025
Updated 1:47
p.m. ET
Vice
President JD Vance landed in Greenland on Friday afternoon as part of a
contentious trip pushed by the Trump administration and angrily opposed by
Greenlanders.
His group,
which includes his wife, Usha, and the national security adviser, Michael
Waltz, was set to tour the Pituffik Space Base, an American missile defense
station and one of the most remote military installations in the world.
President
Trump has been insisting that the United States take over Greenland, which is a
semiautonomous territory of Denmark. He has vowed to “get it — one way or the
other.”
The
government of Greenland did not invite the Vance team and protests had been
planned in Nuuk, the capital, where Ms. Vance was originally scheduled to
visit. That part of the trip was scrapped a few days ago, and the entire visit
will instead unfold at the military base, far from any town — or any chance of
an embarrassing TV moment.
The White
House’s original plan was for Ms. Vance, the second lady, to attend a famous
dog sled race this weekend and see other cultural sites, in an effort to bring
the United States and Greenland closer.
But the plan
backfired. Protesters were gearing up to line the road from the airport into
town. The island’s government blasted the visit as “highly aggressive.” Even
the organizers of the dog sled race said they never asked Ms. Vance to attend
in the first place.
A
spokeswoman for Ms. Vance took issue with this, saying she had received
“multiple invitations.”
According to
journalists traveling with the Vances, Air Force Two touched down at Pituffik
Space Base around 1 p.m. Greenland time. Mr. Vance stepped off wearing jeans
and a green coat. It was sunny and minus 3 degrees Fahrenheit.
As he sat
down for lunch at the base, Mr. Vance made a colorful remark about how cold it
was and said, “Nobody told me,” prompting laughs.
American
officials had said the Vances would be traveling with Chris Wright, the energy
secretary; Mike Lee, a Republican senator; and Mr. Waltz, who is under fire for
discussing military plans over a messaging app in a group that included a
journalist.
Foreign
policy analysts said the revised trip was a watered-down version of what the
White House wanted.
“It’s a
tactical retreat,” said Lars Trier Mogensen, a political analyst based in
Copenhagen. “On the one hand, they de-escalated by not carrying out the full
cultural mission and skipping the P.R. stunt. On the other hand, it’s a
symbolic escalation that the highest-ranking official is visiting Greenland.”
Mr. Vance is
the most senior American official to ever visit the island, according to
foreign policy experts.
Since his
first term, Mr. Trump has been fixated on Greenland. In 2019, he floated the
idea of buying it: Danish officials called that “absurd,” which provoked Mr.
Trump into calling them “nasty.”
This
January, Mr. Trump resurrected the idea for “national security purposes” and
refused to rule out using force to take Greenland from Denmark.
Greenland’s
size — it’s the largest island in the world — and its location in North America
along the increasingly contested Arctic Ocean seems to be the root of Mr.
Trump’s fascination. Members of his inner circle, including Mr. Vance, have
also spoken of Greenland’s “incredible natural resources” (though most of them
are buried under ice).
Just this
week, Mr. Trump said again: “We need it. We have to have it.”
Greenland
had been steadily inching away from Denmark, with the island gaining more power
over its own affairs and Greenlanders showing more interest in full
independence. There is — or there was until recently — a significant movement
within Greenland that wanted to form a closer alliance with the United States,
which has stationed troops on the island since World War II.
But the mood
is turning against Mr. Trump, and many ordinary Greenlanders didn’t want Mr.
Vance to come at all.
“I don’t
know what he wants,” said Tupaarnaq Kanuthsen, a woman walking through Nuuk on
Friday. “He’s not welcome.”
Shortly
before Mr. Vance arrived, officials in Greenland announced a new government;
the island held elections a few weeks ago.
The new
government will be a coalition of all the island’s major parties except one —
the Naleraq party, which has the closest connections to Mr. Trump. One of the
party’s prominent members has been open about his support for Mr. Trump and
even attended the president’s inauguration.
Politicians
from the ruling coalition downplayed the significance of the exclusion of the
Naleraq party, citing other reasons that they couldn’t work with its members.
But members
of the excluded party, which came in second during the election, didn’t buy it.
“I think our
party has been misunderstood,” said Qupanuk Olsen, one of Naleraq’s new members
of Parliament.
“Being open
to cooperation with the U.S. is being interpreted as sucking up to them,” she
said. “But it’s really just about openness to business and trade. Trump is only
president for four more years; we have to think 10, 20 years ahead. We can’t
just shut out the U.S. completely.”
Jeffrey
Gettleman is an international correspondent based in London covering global
events. He has worked for The Times for more than 20 years. More about Jeffrey
Gettleman
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