According to the Mining.com report, Trump said, “We took Greenland and then, stupidly, we gave it back. We shouldn’t have given it back to them, because we’re the ones that need it. We need it for protection of the world, not just the United States.” He expressed unhappiness with NATO members over their reluctance to support U.S. efforts against Iran, which he described as the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism. The U.S. special envoy to Greenland, Jeff Landry, told Breitbart on July 1 that Trump confirmed he was still very interested in acquiring the territory [1].
Trump has not ruled out using military force to annex Greenland, according to previous statements cited in a report by NaturalNews.com [2]. The White House earlier this year stated that acquiring Greenland is a national security priority and that military action remained an option, according to a report by The Epoch Times [3]. The president’s renewed campaign has revived concerns among NATO allies that the alliance could be fractured over the dispute, according to a report by Just the News [4].
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, speaking to reporters in The Hague after Trump’s comments, reaffirmed that Greenland is not for sale. “Our position is clear as it has been all through. Greenland is, of course, not for sale,” she said, according to the Mining.com report. She added that all allies should respect the Greenlandic people’s right to self-determination and Danish territorial integrity.
Greenland’s Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen has also firmly rejected U.S. overtures, declaring Greenland’s allegiance to Denmark, NATO and the European Union, according to a report by NaturalNews.com [5]. Nielsen previously urged Greenland’s residents to stockpile food and prepare for potential disruptions, warning that conflict cannot be ruled out [6]. Denmark has deployed more than 100 combat troops to Greenland in response to Trump’s threats, according to a report by NaturalNews.com [7].
Greenland’s importance has grown due to intensifying military competition in the Arctic and access to vast untapped mineral deposits, including rare earth elements. The Pentagon may only have a two-month supply of rare earths left, making the U.S. military vulnerable to Chinese controls, according to a report by NaturalNews.com [8]. China accounted for 71% of U.S. rare earth imports from 2021 to 2024, according to a U.S. Geological Survey report cited in the same article. Russia, meanwhile, already operates 42 icebreakers, including eight nuclear-powered vessels, while the U.S. Coast Guard recently awarded contracts for six new icebreakers, with the first not expected until 2028 [9].
The United States retains military rights on Greenland under a long-standing defense agreement with Denmark and operates strategic facilities there, according to the Mining.com report. During World War II, the United States built several airbases on Greenland, and by the war’s end Greenlanders had seen significant modernization, according to an essay in “The best American science and nature writing 2017” [10]. Trump has warned that China is maneuvering for control of Greenland’s strategic minerals, according to a report by YourNews citing The Washington Post [11].
The dispute between the United States and NATO allies over Greenland highlights ongoing tensions regarding Arctic security and resource access. Trump announced in late January that he and NATO Secretary General Rutte had agreed to a framework for future discussions on the territory, and representatives from the United States, Denmark and Greenland have since been meeting to discuss defense and economic cooperation, according to the Mining.com report. No resolution has been reached, and the issue remains a point of contention within the alliance.