How Trump
gets Greenland in 4 easy steps
And
worryingly for the Danes, it looks like he’s started …
The
trouble is, Greenland already belongs to Denmark and most Greenlanders don't
want to become part of the U.S. |
January
7, 2026 12:00 am CET
By Zoya
Sheftalovich and Victor Jack
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-greenland-easy-steps-nato-policy-deal-military/
Donald
Trump wants the U.S. to own Greenland. The trouble is, Greenland already
belongs to Denmark and most Greenlanders don't want to become part of the U.S.
While
swooping into Greenland's capital, Nuuk, and taking over Venezuela-style seems
fanciful ― even if the military attack on Caracas seems to have provided a jolt
to all sides about what the U.S. is capable of ― there's a definite pathway.
And Trump already appears to be some way along it.
Worryingly
for the Europeans, the strategy looks an awful lot like Vladimir Putin’s
expansionist playbook.
POLITICO
spoke with nine EU officials, NATO insiders, defense experts and diplomats to
game out how a U.S. takeover of the mineral-rich and strategically important
Arctic island could play out.
“It could
be like five helicopters ... he wouldn't need a lot of troops," said a
Danish politician who asked for anonymity to speak freely. “There would be
nothing they [Greenlanders] could do.”
Step 1:
Influence campaign to boost Greenland’s independence movement
Almost
immediately upon taking office, the Trump administration began talking up
independence for Greenland, a semi-autonomous territory of the Kingdom of
Denmark. An unshackled Greenland could sign deals with the U.S., while under
the status quo it needs Copenhagen’s approval.
To gain
independence, Greenlanders would need to vote in a referendum, then negotiate a
deal that both Nuuk and Copenhagen must approve. In a 2025 opinion poll, 56
percent of Greenlanders said they would vote in favor of independence, while 28
percent said they would vote against it.
Americans
with ties to Trump have carried out covert influence operations in Greenland,
according to Danish media reports, with Denmark’s security and intelligence
service, PET, warning the territory “is the target of influence campaigns of
various kinds.”
Felix
Kartte, a digital policy expert who has advised EU institutions and
governments, pointed to Moscow's tactics for influencing political outcomes in
countries such as Moldova, Romania and Ukraine.
“Russia
mixes offline and online tactics,” he said. “On the ground, it works with
aligned actors such as extremist parties, diaspora networks or pro-Russian
oligarchs, and has been reported to pay people to attend anti-EU or anti-U.S.
protests.
"At
the same time, it builds large networks of fake accounts and pseudo-media
outlets to amplify these activities online and boost selected candidates or
positions. The goal is often not to persuade voters that a pro-Russian option
is better, but to make it appear larger, louder and more popular than it really
is, creating a sense of inevitability.”
On
Greenland, the U.S. appears to be deploying at least some of these methods.
Stephen
Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff, told CNN on Monday that “nobody is going
to fight the U.S. militarily over the future of Greenland.”
Last
month, Trump created the position of special envoy to Greenland and appointed
Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry to the role. He declared his goal was to “make
Greenland a part of the U.S.”
Meanwhile,
U.S. Vice President JD Vance, on a visit to the territory in March, said
"the people of Greenland are going to have self-determination.” He added: "We hope that they
choose to partner with the United States, because we're the only nation on
Earth that will respect their sovereignty and respect their security.”
Step 2:
Offer Greenland a sweet deal
Assuming
its efforts to speed up Greenland’s independence referendum come to fruition,
and the territory’s inhabitants vote to leave Denmark behind, the next step
would be to bring it under U.S. influence.
One
obvious method would be to fold Greenland into the U.S. as another state — an
idea those close to the president have repeatedly toyed with. Denmark’s Prime
Minister Mette Frederiksen was on Monday forced to say that "the U.S. has
no right to annex" Greenland after Katie Miller — the wife of Stephen
Miller — posted to social media a map of the territory draped in a U.S. flag
and the word "SOON.”
A direct
swap of Denmark for the U.S. seems largely unpalatable to most of the
population. The poll mentioned above also showed 85 percent of Greenlanders
oppose the territory becoming part of the U.S., and even Trump-friendly members
of the independence movement aren’t keen on the idea.
But there
are other options.
Reports
have circulated since last May that the Trump administration wants Greenland to
sign a Compact of Free Association (COFA) — like those it currently has with
Micronesia, the Marshall Islands and Palau. Under the deals, the U.S. provides
essential services, protection and free trade in exchange for its military
operating without restriction on those countries' territory. The idea
resurfaced this week.
Kuno
Fencker, a pro-independence Greenlandic opposition MP who attended Trump’s
inauguration and met with Republican Congressman Andy Ogles last year, said he
tries to “explain to [the Americans] that we don't want to be like Puerto Rico,
or any other territory of the United States. But a Compact of Free Association,
bilateral agreements, or even opportunities and other means which maybe I can't
imagine — let them
come to the table and Greenlanders will decide in a plebiscite.”
Compared
to Nuuk's deal with Copenhagen, things “can only go upwards,” he said.
Referring
to Trump’s claim that the U.S. has a “need” for Greenland, Fencker added:
“Denmark has never said that they ‘needed’ Greenland. Denmark has said that
Greenland is an expense, and they would leave us if we become independent. So I
think it's a much more positive remark than we have ever seen from Denmark.”
But
Thomas Crosbie, an associate professor of military operations at the Royal
Danish Defense College that provides training and education for the Danish
defense forces, warned that Greenland is unlikely to get the better of Trump in
a negotiation.
“Trump's
primary identity as a deal-maker is someone who forces his will on the people
he's negotiating with, and someone who has a very long track record of
betraying people who he's negotiated deals with, not honoring his commitments,
both in private and public life, and exploiting those around him ... I really
see zero benefits to Greenlandic people other than a very temporary boost to
their self esteem.”
And, he
added, “it would be crazy to agree to something in the hope that a deal may
come. I mean, if you give away your territory in the hopes that you might get a
deal afterwards — that would be just really imprudent.”
Step 3:
Get Europe on board
Europe,
particularly Denmark’s EU allies, would balk at any attempt to cleave Greenland
away from Copenhagen. But the U.S. administration does have a trump card to
play on that front: Ukraine.
As peace
negotiations have gathered pace, Kyiv has said that any deal with Putin must be
backed by serious, long-term U.S. security guarantees.
The
Americans have prevaricated on that front, and in any case, Kyiv is skeptical
about security guarantees, given those it has received from both Russia and the
West in the past have amounted to nothing.
One
potential scenario an EU diplomat floated would be a security-for-security
package deal, under which Europe gets firmer assurances from the Trump
administration for Ukraine in exchange for an expanded role for the U.S. in
Greenland.
While
that seems like a bitter pill, it could be easier to swallow than the
alternative, annoying Trump, who may retaliate by imposing sanctions, pulling
out of peace negotiations — or by throwing his weight behind Putin in
negotiations with Ukraine.
Step 4:
Military invasion
But what
if Greenland — or Denmark, whose "OK" Nuuk needs to secede — says no
to Trump?
A U.S.
military takeover could be achieved without much difficulty.
Crosbie,
from the Royal Danish Defense College, said Trump’s strategists are likely
presenting him with various options.
“The most
worrisome would be a fait accompli-type strategy, which we see a lot and think
about a lot in military circles, which would be simply grabbing the land the
same way Putin tried to grab, to make territorial claims, over Ukraine. He
could just simply put troops in the country and just say that it's American now
... the United States military is capable of landing any number of forces on
Greenland, either by air or by sea, and then claiming that it's American
territory.”
According
to Lin Mortensgaard, a researcher at the Danish Institute for International
Studies and an expert on Greenlandic security, Washington also has around 500
military officers, including local contractors, on the ground at its northern
Pituffik Space Base and just under 10 consulate staff in Nuuk. That’s alongside
roughly 100 National Guard troops from New York who are usually deployed
seasonally in the Arctic summer to support research missions.
Greenland,
meanwhile, has few defenses. The population has no territorial army,
Mortensgaard said, while Denmark’s Joint Arctic Command in the capital includes
scant and out-of-date military assets, largely limited to four inspection and
navy vessels, a dog-sled patrol, several helicopters and one maritime patrol
aircraft.
As a
result, if Trump mobilizes the U.S. presence on the ground — or flies in
special forces — the U.S. could seize control of Nuuk “in half an hour or
less,” Mortensgaard said.
“Mr.
Trump says things and then he does them,” said Danish Member of European
Parliament Stine Bosse. “If you were one of 60,000 people in Greenland, you
would be very worried.”
Any
incursion would have no “legal basis” under U.S. and international law, said
Romain Chuffart, who heads the Washington, D.C.-based Arctic Institute, a
security think tank. Any occupation beyond 60 days would also require approval
from the U.S. Congress.
Meanwhile,
an invasion would “mean the end of NATO,” he said, and the “U.S. would be …
shooting itself in the foot and waving goodbye to an alliance it has helped
create.”
Beyond
that, a “loss of trust by key allies … could result in a reduction in their
willingness to share intelligence with the U.S. or a reduction in access to
bases across Europe,” said Ben Hodges, a former commander of U.S. troops in
Europe. “Both of these would be severely damaging to America’s security.”
Reports
have circulated since last May that the Trump administration wants Greenland to
sign a Compact of Free Association (COFA) — like those it currently has with
Micronesia, the Marshall Islands and Palau. | Joe Raedle/Getty Images
NATO
would be left unable to respond, given that military action must be approved
unanimously and the U.S. is the key member of the alliance, but European allies
could deploy troops to Greenland via other groupings such as the
U.K.-Scandinavian Joint Expeditionary Force or the five-country Nordic Defence
Cooperation format, said Ed Arnold, a senior fellow at the Royal United
Services Institute.
But for
now, NATO allies remain cool-headed about an attack. “We are still far from
that scenario,” said one senior alliance diplomat. “There could be some tough
negotiations, but I don’t think we are close to any hostile takeover.”
Max
Griera, Gerardo Fortuna and Seb Starcevic contributed reporting.

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