News
Analysis
Trump Has
an Offramp on Greenland. He Doesn’t Seem to Want It.
The
strategic importance of Greenland is growing, and NATO has underinvested in
Arctic security. But President Trump, intent on ownership, is rebuffing deals
with Europe to solve the problem.
David E.
Sanger
By David
E. Sanger
David E.
Sanger has covered five American presidents and often writes on the revival of
superpower conflict, the topic of his latest book.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/19/us/politics/trump-greenland-nato.html
Jan. 19,
2026, 5:02 a.m. ET
As the
struggle for control of Greenland intensifies — and with it, the question of
whether the Atlantic alliance will suffer a mortal wound — two raw geopolitical
realities have come into focus.
The first
is that all the members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization underinvested
in Arctic security for years, as melting glaciers, aggressive Chinese and
Russian navies and critical undersea communications cables made one of earth’s
coldest landscapes ripe for renewed superpower conflict.
The
second is that President Trump has no intention of seeking a common solution to
this long-brewing problem.
Instead,
he has deliberately opened what could become the largest rift in the nearly
77-year history of the alliance, one that led the German vice chancellor to
declare over the weekend that European nations “must not allow ourselves to be
blackmailed” by the largest power in the group.
Even one
of Mr. Trump’s favorite fellow leaders, President Alexander Stubb of Finland,
whose country rushed into the alliance in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine, warned of a “dangerous downward spiral.”
What
makes this crisis both remarkable and unnecessary is that it appears so
deliberately manufactured by Mr. Trump himself. As an opening position, he has
made clear he is not interested in diplomatic compromises that would almost
certainly achieve his stated defense aims: More U.S. bases to monitor Chinese
and Russian shipping, and the expansion of his still-nascent “Golden Dome”
missile defense project.
He has
shown no interest so far in looking for diplomatic offramps, or the kind of
defense partnerships that NATO has long fostered. Every time the Europeans
offer solutions — everything short of outright American ownership of the Danish
territory — Mr. Trump turns them aside, demanding all 836,000 square miles of
Greenland, even if most of it is covered in ice sheet.
In fact,
the sheer size of it appears to be part of the lure. The fact that most of the
territory is uninhabitable does not seem to bother Mr. Trump. It is the
ultimate real estate prize: a territory about three times the size of Texas,
and bigger than Alaska, which is around a mere 665,000 square miles.
If Mr.
Trump prevails, he will have pulled off the largest land acquisition in
American history, even larger than Secretary of State William H. Seward’s
negotiation in 1867, when he bought Alaska from Russia for about 2 cents an
acre.
To
increase the pressure on Denmark and its European allies, Mr. Trump has quickly
reached for his favorite weapon of economic coercion: tariffs. A year to the
week after he used his inaugural address to warn that “nothing will stand” in
the way of his carrying out his America First agenda, he sounded unconcerned
about the possibility of breaking up the most effective military alliance in
modern history to satisfy his demand for Greenland.
He does
have an easier option. A treaty between the United States and Denmark, signed
in 1951 at the end of the Truman administration, gives the United States broad
rights to reopen the 16 or so military bases that it once had on Greenland.
They were
shuttered because Washington thought the era of strategic competition for the
Arctic ended when the Soviet Union collapsed. It did not want to pay for frozen
bases. So they were left to the winds and the ice: A tour of a few of the old
facilities last summer revealed that the long Greenland winters had blown out
the windows of the surviving houses and command centers. Runways were broken up
into chunks, and overgrown.
But for a
few billion dollars — far less than it would cost to buy Greenland outright —
the United States has the right to build deep ports, long runways, radar
stations and launch sites for missile defense interceptors. It just has not
asked. As one senior Danish official put it archly, the country is ready to say
yes — which may be why Mr. Trump does not want to raise the issue.
And when
asked in a New York Times interview earlier this month what would happen if he
had to choose between his territorial ambitions and preserving the alliance, he
simply said, “It may be a choice.”
“Ownership
is very important,” he said. “Because that is what I feel is psychologically
needed for success.”
Asked
about the prospect of using military force, he replied, “I don’t think it’ll be
necessary.”
Heather
Conley, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a scholar of Arctic
defense politics, noted on Friday in a talk for the Council on Foreign
Relations that the strategic issues Mr. Trump brought up were justified — even
if the demand for ownership was mystifying.
“The
Arctic shortens distances, whether that’s missile, whether that’s submarine,
maritime vessels, undersea cables,” she said. “And as the Arctic transforms
environmentally, we’re seeing a lot of additional economic activity.”
Mr. Trump
has inflated the urgency of the threat, making it sound like China and Russia
are about to take over the territory. But China, Ms. Conley noted, is “doing a
lot acoustical science research” — which helps track submarines — along with
deep sea mining. And “now NATO, because of all of this, is finally stepping up
to increase its exercising and its presence,” she said.
But none
of that fits in Mr. Trump’s narrative, which has grown louder and more urgent.
At first, the Europeans thought Mr. Trump was just blustering, or just applying
the rules of the New York real estate world — take maximalist positions,
threaten lawsuits — to negotiate a better deal.
Then,
just before his inauguration, Mr. Trump said at a news conference at Mar-a-Lago
that of course he might consider the use of force to win his way on Greenland
and the Panama Canal, which he has demanded be returned to American possession.
For a
while, things calmed down. But as they have flared up anew, European leaders
announced a series of steps they insisted would satisfy Mr. Trump’s demands,
short of actually turning over the keys to the icy territory.
They
started an expansion of NATO member “military presence in and around
Greenland,” and said it would include air, naval and ground components. Denmark
has sharply increased its military spending, despite Mr. Trump’s claim that the
country’s military capabilities are limited to “two dog sleds.”
The
protests from the Danish, and from the rest of Europe, about the importance of
preserving the concept of sovereignty incited Mr. Trump to dig in deeper. On
Saturday, in a statement, President Emmanuel Macron of France obliquely
compared Mr. Trump’s efforts to coerce the sale of Greenland to Russia’s
seizure of parts of Ukraine.
Now the
Europeans and Americans are talking past one another — and setting up the
conditions for potential confrontation.
When
several European powers said they were dispatching a tiny group of military
personnel to Greenland, Mr. Trump immediately interpreted it as intended to
deter any armed takeover by the United States. (He was not wrong, but it was
more a token presence than a serious defensive force.)
Mr. Trump
then declared that “anything less” than selling all of Greenland to the United
States “is unacceptable.”
Then came
the tariffs, based on a presidential declaration of an incipient “emergency”
that he has yet to define.
Over the
weekend, a European ambassador in Washington said he and his colleagues feared
where this might be going: Europe would impose counter-tariffs, and Mr. Trump,
he said, might threaten to leave NATO or announce he would not come to the
defense of any country in the alliance who opposed him on Greenland.
Yet
European officials say they cannot back down.
“In
Greenland, an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark, Europeans
have a particular responsibility,” Mr. Macron told French defense forces at a
ceremony on Sunday. “This territory belongs to the European Union, and it is
also the territory of one of our NATO allies.”
What he
left unsaid is what he plans to do about it, if Mr. Trump will settle for
nothing less than a coerced territorial surrender.
David E.
Sanger covers the Trump administration and a range of national security issues.
He has been a Times journalist for more than four decades and has written four
books on foreign policy and national security challenges.


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