White
House says using US military is ‘always an option’ for acquiring Greenland
European
leaders push back forcefully against US president’s desire to seek takeover of
Arctic territory
Lauren
Gambino
Tue 6 Jan
2026 23.45 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/06/trump-greenland-control-us-military
Donald
Trump and his advisers are looking into “a range of options” in an effort to
acquire Greenland, noting in a White House statement on Tuesday that using the
US military to do so is “always an option”.
“President
Trump has made it well known that acquiring Greenland is a national security
priority of the United States, and it’s vital to deter our adversaries in the
Arctic region. The president and his team are discussing a range of options to
pursue this important foreign policy goal, and of course, utilizing the US
military is always an option at the commander-in-chief’s disposal,” White House
press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.
Leavitt’s
comments came as the leaders of major European powers pushed back against
Trump’s long-running desire to seize the Arctic territory.
In a show
of solidarity on Tuesday, the leaders of France, Germany, Britain and other
nations issued a joint statement with the prime minister of Denmark, Mette
Frederiksen, urging the US to respect its sovereignty. They wrote in the
statement that Arctic security was a top priority for Nato, a defense alliance
that includes the United States and Greenland.
“Greenland
belongs to its people,” the statement said. “It is for Denmark and Greenland,
and them only, to decide on matters concerning Denmark and Greenland.”
Greenland’s
government said it had asked the US state department for an “urgent” meeting
with the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, Greenland’s minister for foreign
affairs and research, Vivian Motzfeldt, and the Danish foreign minister, Lars
Løkke Rasmussen, to discuss “the US’s claims about our country”.
Rasmussen
told the Danish public broadcaster DR that a meeting would give the Danes and
Greenlanders a chance to correct some of Trump’s claims, including that there
are a lot of Russian and Chinese ships around Greenland, and that China exerts
great influence there through investments.
“We do
not share this image that Greenland is plastered with Chinese investments … nor
that there are Chinese warships up and down along Greenland,” he said,
according to the broadcaster. Rasmussen spoke to reporters after an emergency
session of Denmark’s foreign policy committee and defence ministry with just
one item on the agenda: “The Kingdom’s relations with the United States.”
Denmark’s
defence minister, Troels Lund Poulsen, said after the meeting that Denmark had
spent billions to increase security in Greenland, not, as Trump had claimed
this week, by adding just “one more dog sled”.
Frederiksen
previously warned that an attack by the US on a Nato ally would mean the “end”
of the military alliance and “post-second world war security”. It would, she
said, be the end of “everything”.
Trump has
renewed calls for a US takeover of Greenland after the dark-of-night arrest of
Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan president, on Saturday. The next day, Trump said
that he needed Greenland “very badly”, prompting a ramping-up of tensions among
the US, the semi-autonomous Danish territory and Europe.
Greenland
has repeatedly stated that it does not want to be part of the US. The idea is
also unpopular in the US, where one poll found just 7% of Americans agree with
a military seizure of Greenland.
In an
earlier interview with CNN, White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller
suggested Denmark does not have a right to the Arctic territory, which is a
former Danish colony and remains part of its kingdom. While the mineral-rich
island, home to 56,000 people, has control over most internal affairs,
Copenhagen continues to oversee its foreign and security policy.
Miller
also claimed military intervention would not be needed to take over the island
because “nobody is going to fight the United States militarily over the future
of Greenland”.
The CNN
interview was conducted after Miller’s wife, the rightwing podcaster Katie
Miller, posted a photo of the US flag draped across a map of Greenland,
captioned “SOON”.
In a
private briefing on Capitol Hill, Rubio told lawmakers on Monday that the
administration would prefer to buy the island from Denmark rather than invade
it, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
Strategically
situated between the US and Russia, Greenland is viewed as an increasingly
important defense hub and an emerging geopolitical battleground as the climate
crisis and growing militarization raise tensions in the region. Trump has said
Greenland is critical to the US’s national security, though the US already
operates a base there.
For
years, European leaders mostly downplayed – or sometimes made light of –
Trump’s interest in seizing Greenland. But Maduro’s swift capture by elite US
forces has changed the tenor.
At a
press conference in Paris on Tuesday, Keir Starmer, the UK prime minister, who
touted new commitments from the Trump administration to defend Ukraine, was
asked pointedly: “What value do these commitments have on the very day that at
the highest levels of government in Washington they are talking about seizing
the sovereign territory of a fellow Nato member?”
Starmer
said he stood by the statement he made on Monday, when he said that “Greenland
and the Kingdom of Denmark must determine the future of Greenland and nobody
else”.
Meanwhile,
in Washington, top congressional Republicans sought to downplay the likelihood
of military action in Greenland, with the Senate majority leader, John Thune,
telling Politico: “That to me is not something anybody is contemplating
seriously.”
Congressman
Ryan Zinke, a Republican from Montana who served as secretary of the interior
during the first Trump administration, said he was not surprised that Trump
would decline to rule out the use of military force to seize Greenland.
“The
president rarely rules out any option,” he told NewsNation on Tuesday, adding:
“But Greenland is different. Greenland is obviously a Nato partner.”
But
Democrats warned that Trump’s threats should be taken seriously. The US senator
Ruben Gallego, a Democrat from Arizona, has introduced legislation that would
“prohibit the use of funds for military force or other hostilities against
Greenland”. In a post on X, he accused Trump of wanting Greenland simply to
possess a “giant island with his name on it”.
“He
wouldn’t think twice about putting our troops in danger if it makes him feel
big and strong,” Gallego wrote. “The US military is not a toy.”
Robert
Mackey contributed reporting

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