‘We need
to fight’: Trump Greenland threat brings sense of unity in Denmark
The US
president has galvanised the Danish population against him, while Danes’
relations with Greenlanders are ‘under reparation’
Miranda
Bryant
Miranda
Bryant in Copenhagen
Fri 23
Jan 2026 17.22 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/23/trump-greenland-threat-sense-of-unity-denmark
For the
past three weeks, 24 hours a day, Denmark has been consumed by discussions
about whether or not Greenland, a largely self-governing part of the Danish
kingdom, will be invaded by the US, the Danes’ closest ally.
“We got a
wake-up call,” said Linea Obbekjær, 64, as she left a supermarket with her bike
in Copenhagen’s sprawling Østerbro neighbourhood. “So we are thinking about
what is important to us.” Many had been spurred by recent events to take
action. “People want to do something,” said Obbekjær. “Not sit and look at the
television, but go out and do something.”
The
country is working through a shared sense of anger and bewilderment that has
bruised its pride and shaken its collective sense of self.
But as
well as galvanising the Danish population against him, Donald Trump’s martial
rhetoric – often arriving in the early hours of the morning thanks to the
transatlantic time difference and his habit of posting on social media late
into the US night – has also gone some way to easing tensions between Denmark
and Greenland.
Last
weekend, thousands took to the streets of Copenhagen in protest, waving red and
white Greenlandic and Danish flags. Many wore Maga-style red hats bearing
slogans including “Nu det NUUK!”, a play on the Danish phrase nu det nok,
meaning “now it’s enough”, to incorporate the name of the Greenlandic capital.
Julie
Rademacher, a member of Uagut, the national organisation for Greenlandic people
in Denmark and one of the protest organisers, was overwhelmed by the support
the protesters had received – from Greenlanders, Danes, Americans and people
around the world. “The first half-hour in front of City Hall when this ocean of
people just showed up, every time they cheered because of the speeches I
couldn’t stop crying,” she said, her eyes welling up at the memory.
Like many
in Denmark and Greenland, Rademacher has a family member who fought alongside
US soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq. “It’s been unbelievable to experience one
of our closest allies threatening to annex our country,” she said. “But it is
happening and we need to fight.”
Rademacher
believes Trump has achieved the opposite of what he was seeking to do, in that
Greenlanders have been pushed away from him, while relations between
Greenlanders and Danes, while having a long way to go, are “under reparation”.
She cited
a recent encounter on the streets between another member of Uagut and a Danish
stranger who wanted to apologise for Denmark’s colonial abuses of Greenlanders.
“One Greenlander, one Dane,” she said. “Our Greenlandic member was so touched
by it, because it shows so much respect and trust.”
Caps and
‘Canados’
Jesper
Rabe Tonnesen, 58, a vintage shop owner and creator of the Nu det NUUK! hats,
said Denmark had gone on a journey from disagreement to unity.
“We feel
threatened like the people from Greenland,” he said. “Of course, we are a
little country – one of the best countries in the world, but a small economy.
We can’t do anything about this without France and the greater nations.”
There
was, he said, a feeling like wartime solidarity between Denmark and Greenland
and with the EU.
Tonnesen
said the cap had been “my little protest” eight months ago when people kept
telling him that they had stopped paying attention to the news because it made
them depressed. He had 80 made and nobody bought them, but after going viral a
couple of weeks ago, supplies sold out in two hours. Hundreds more were made to
distribute at the protest, with thousands more on the way. In another small act
of defiance, the cafe at his creative workshop now calls Americanos “Canados”,
in reference to another country in the crosshairs of Trump’s aggressive and
erratic foreign policy whims.
The US,
he said, had meant everything to Denmark in terms of defence but had also
influenced culture. “In the fashion, the way of thinking, the American dream to
become something, and especially maybe to take care of democracy to keep a free
world,” he said. “And what we see now is not a free world any more in America.
All the values in Denmark and almost all of Europe are changing now.”
Outside
the US embassy, Tina Henriksen, 58, a nurse, who is half Greenlandic and half
Danish, said Greenland and Denmark now “have to stand together”, adding that
Danish people were “opening their minds to Greenland” in a new way.
Boycotting
Björk
Despite
the signs of a newfound unity between Danes and Greenlanders, the colonial
wounds run deep. As recently as December, victims of a historical IUD scandal,
in which thousands of Greenlandic women and girls were forcibly fitted with
contraceptive coils without their knowledge or consent, claimed victory in
their legal fight with the Danish government after it was confirmed they would
be eligible for compensation.
It was
not until last year that “parenting competence” tests were banned on people
with Greenlandic backgrounds after years of criticism by campaigners and human
rights bodies, who argued successfully that the tests were racist because they
were culturally unsuitable for people from Inuit backgrounds.
At the
beginning of January, Björk drew attention to the scandals on social media and
urged Greenlanders to declare independence. “I burst for sympathy for
Greenlanders,” wrote the singer, who comes from Iceland, itself a former Danish
dependency.
The post
divided people in Denmark. One record store, RecordPusher in the city of
Odense, responded by boycotting the star’s music entirely. Its chief executive,
Bo Ellegaard Pedersen, said at the time that the statement had “in no way done
anything good for the current situation of the Danish commonwealth” and accused
her of “creating her own reality like Trump”. He added: “This post divides
friends and only helps the idiot on the other side of the Atlantic.”
Speaking
this week, Ellegaard said he had felt compelled to act because Björk’s comments
felt like a “stab in the back”. He said he had been inundated with messages in
the aftermath, including some calling him a racist and a colonialist, but he
says many were positive.
When
Jakob Hejnfelt Thoren, 37, the owner of Rekords, a hip-hop record store in
Copenhagen’s Nørrebro district, saw the boycott post, he decided to do the
opposite and started stocking Björk records.
While he
does not necessarily agree entirely with what Björk wrote, he wanted to support
the right to freedom of speech. “Being a part of hip-hop culture it comes very
natural to be on the oppressed side,” he said in his store, its racks filled
with hip-hop classics by artists including The Notorious BIG and 2Pac.
Greenland
is “trapped between these two colonisers, so of course we are on their side”,
he added.
A father
of two small children, he wakes up every morning checking the news and is
worried about what might happen with Trump’s politics suddenly feeling so close
to home. “You never know what Trump is going to say, what he is going to do.”
‘The
shock has turned into clarity’
Danish
students Emily Jensen, 26, and Rikke Nielsen, 26, said the current crisis had
been dominating conversations at home. “It’s impossible to understand what he
is going to do actually so it’s really frustrating and scary,” said Jensen.
They have
been trying to learn more about Greenlandic people. Nielsen said she had become
more aware of Denmark’s colonial history with Greenland when the prime
minister, Mette Frederiksen, last year apologised to victims of the IUD
scandal.
Others
have been showing their outrage with the US by boycotting US products. Usage of
Made O’Meter, an app that helps people to identify US products in Danish
supermarkets, rose by 1,400% in the days after Trump started threatening
tariffs against Denmark and other allies that opposed his plans to invade or
buy Greenland.
Ian
Rosenfeldt, who created the app last March when the US president first hit
Europe with tariffs, said this time the reaction was different. “The shock has
turned into clarity,” he said. “An ally became someone we cannot trust and one
we’re far too dependent on.” People in Denmark and across Europe were realising
they needed to reduce their reliance on US technology, products and platforms,
he added.
Not
everybody thinks the US president has permanently damaged US-Danish relations.
In a
coffee shop on Wednesday afternoon, as Trump finished his Davos speech,
76-year-old Mette Jensen said of the relationship: “Of course they can be
repaired. But not with Trump.”

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