Unlock the publisher’s digest free
Roula Khalaf, editor -in -chief of the FT, selects her favorite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Denmark Prime Minister Put Frederiksen will visit Greenland next week and meet the newly appointed chief of Island Jens-Frederik Nielsen after US vice-president JD Vance said that Denmark has neglected the autonomous territory.
Danish officials postponed American criticism on Saturday, saying that America has neglected the security of Greenland by considerably reducing its military presence in the Arctic.
Lars Løkke Rasmussen, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Denmark, responded on Friday to the non -invited visit to the American vice -president in an American military base in Greenland by saying that Copenhagen was “open to criticism”, but “we do not like the tone in which it is delivered – it is not the way you talk about your relatives”.
He added: “In 1945, the United States had 17 military bases and installations in Greenland with thousands of soldiers. Today, only one American base is left … And something like 200 soldiers. We can do more, much more, in the frame that we have today … Let us do it together.”
Donald Trump’s public desire to take over Greenland from Denmark has placed the future of the Arctic island and its 57,000 people under geopolitical spotlights.
Vance, with the American national security councilor Mike Waltz and the energy secretary, Chris Wright, visited the Pitoffik space base and accused Denmark not to do “a good job of the Greenland population”.
Greenland is a semi-autonomous territory in the kingdom of Denmark, but the majority of its population ultimately wants the independence of Copenhagen.
Danish officials, who unveiled a defense package of $ 2 billion after conceding that they had not invested sufficiently in the security of the island, initially adopted a cautious approach to the expansionist claims of Trump. But last week, they became more assertive.
Rasmussen said Vance also admitted that the United States had not invested sufficiently in the Arctic. “The fact is that we have all harvested the peace dividend. We all acted by assuming that the Arctic was and should be a low-voltage area. But this time is over. The status quo is not an option,” he said.
Trump argued that the United States has lagged behind Russia and China in areas such as the galaes, because its two largest geopolitical rivals are preparing for a merger of ice in the FAR North.
But Danish and Greenlanders were horrified by his rhetoric that “we must have” from Greenland, refusing to exclude military force.
Friday, Vance said that he did not think that “military force would never be necessary”, in part because it expected the Greenlanders to choose the independence of Denmark and subsequently a closer partnership with the United States. The vice-president added that there were threats from China and Russia in Greenland, but the experts said that the only public threat had come from the United States.
Denmark has sent troops to fight alongside American soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq and its officials were dismayed by the criticisms of their nearest security ally. But they were also relieved that Vance did not increase things. “I thought it would have been worse,” said one of them.
Frederiksen said that Vance’s criticism was not “a fair way to refer to Denmark”, which she called “a good and strong ally” in the United States.
Under a large-scale defense agreement of 1951, the United States was authorized to set up military bases through Greenland as long as it does not impose on the sovereignty of Denmark.
Greenland and Danish officials said they had proposed several times in recent years to make the United States increase its military imprint, but America has rather reduced its presence.
Greenland unveiled a new broad government coalition on Friday. Nielsen criticized Vance for a lack of respect by announcing his non -invited visit while the government’s training talks were still underway. A certain number of Danish ministers have said that they would soon visit, now that a new government has been trained.