Marco
Rubio says he will meet Danish officials to discuss Greenland next week
Remarks
by US secretary of state come after Greenland and Denmark request urgent
meeting over Trump threats
Miranda
Bryant and David Smith
Wed 7 Jan
2026 19.28 GMT
The US
secretary of state, Marco Rubio, says he plans to meet Danish officials next
week to discuss Greenland as a crisis escalates within Nato over Donald Trump’s
threats to take over the Arctic territory.
An urgent
meeting had been requested by the foreign ministers of Greenland and Denmark,
which has said that any invasion or seizure of the territory by its Nato ally
would mark the end of the western military alliance and “post-second world war
security”.
Speaking
to reporters in Washington, Rubio did not directly answer a question about
whether the Trump administration was willing to risk the alliance by
potentially moving ahead with a military option to gain control of Greenland.
“I’m not
here to talk about Denmark or military intervention, I’ll be meeting with them
next week,” he said. “We’ll have those conversations with them then, but I
don’t have anything further to add to that.” Every US president retains the
option of addressing national security threats through military means, he said.
France
said on Tuesday that it was working with allies on how to react if the US were
to invade Greenland. “We want to take action, but we want to do so together
with our European partners,” the French foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot,
told France Inter radio.
Rubio
said Trump had been talking about acquiring Greenland since his first term.
“That’s always been the president’s intent from the very beginning,” he said.
“He’s not the first US president that has examined or looked at how we could
acquire Greenland.”
The White
House said Trump preferred diplomacy but would not rule out military action.
“That’s something that’s currently being actively discussed by the president
and his national security team,” the press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said
when asked about a possible US offer to buy the territory from Denmark. “The
president has been very open and clear … that he views it in the best interest
of the United States to deter Russian and Chinese aggression in the Arctic
region, and so that’s why his team is currently talking about what a potential
purchase would look like,” she said.
Asked why
the US had refused to rule out military action, she replied: “I know that past
presidents and past leaders have often ruled things out. They’ve often been
very open about ruling things in and basically broadcasting their foreign
policy strategy to the rest of the world – not just to our allies, but most
egregiously to our adversaries. That’s not something this president does.
“All
options are always on the table … But I will just say that the president’s
first option always has been diplomacy.”
Leavitt
was also pressed on what the US would gain by controling Greenland that it did
not have already in its access to military bases there. “More control over the
Arctic region and ensuring that China and Russia and our adversaries cannot
continue their aggression in this very important and strategic region,” she
said.
Trump
said on Wednesday that the US would not desert Nato in a backhanded social
media post that also criticised the alliance.
“We will
always be there for Nato, even if they won’t be there for us,” he wrote on
Truth Social. Russia and China would “have zero fear” of Nato without the US,
he said. Addressing “all of those big Nato fans”, he added: “They were at 2%
GDP, and most weren’t paying their bills, UNTIL I CAME ALONG.”
After one
of Trump’s leading aides said on Tuesday that the US may be willing to seize
control of the Arctic territory by force, European leaders rallied around
Denmark and Greenland with a rare rebuke to the White House, declaring that
Greenland “belongs to its people”.
Barrot
said that in a phone call on Tuesday Rubio had told him that he had “ruled out
the possibility of an invasion” of Greenland. “I myself was on the phone
yesterday with Marco Rubio … who confirmed that this was not the approach
taken,” he said.
Trump has
long expressed an interest in acquiring Greenland. But in recent days, after
the US military operation in Venezuela on Saturday in which troops removed the
country’s president, Nicolás Maduro, the Trump administration’s rhetoric – and,
subsequently, international tensions – have ramped up to new heights, putting
the survival of Nato into question.
On
Tuesday night, the Danish parliament held an extraordinary meeting to discuss
the unprecedented situation.
Lars
Løkke Rasmussen, the Danish foreign minister, and his Greenlandic counterpart,
Vivian Motzfeldt, said they were seeking an urgent meeting with Rubio to
discuss Greenland. “We would like to add some nuance to the conversation,”
Rasmussen said on social media. “The shouting match must be replaced by a more
sensible dialogue. Now.”
Trump has
claimed that Greenland is “full of Chinese and Russian ships” and that Denmark
is incapable of defending Greenland, which the president has said is vital for
US national security.
But
Rasmussen said after the extraordinary meeting that the US was giving a false
representation of what was happening in Greenland. “The image that is being
painted of Russian and Chinese ships right inside the Nuuk fjord and massive
Chinese investments being made is not correct,” he said.
The
situation, Rasmussen said, was “based on a misreading of what is up and what is
down”, adding: “We are looking after the kingdom.”
Denmark’s
defence minister, Troels Lund Poulsen, disputed US claims that the country was
not doing enough to protect Greenland. “We have invested close to 100bn [Danish
kroner] (£11.6bn) in security capabilities,” he said.

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