When the US attacks Iran and demands NATO countries' participation, should the EU claim Alaska for itself? We need it for national security.
#usa #iran #eu #greenland #nato #NATOCrisis #natocrisisgreenland
When the US attacks Iran and demands NATO countries' participation, should the EU claim Alaska for itself? We need it for national security.
#usa #iran #eu #greenland #nato #NATOCrisis #natocrisisgreenland
Labour need to work on their talking points. Attacking the Greens, they say "what would they do to defend Greenland if they had pulled the UK out of Nato".
The US is both a NATO member and the aggressor against Greenland, a situation which shows precisely how compromised NATO has become with Trump in office.
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/exclusive-keir-starmer-orders-labour-170017360.html
#GreenParty #GPEW #LabourPartyUK #NATOGreenlandSecurity #USGreenlandConflict #WesternAllianceBreakdown #NATOcrisis
🧵 3) If we do go to war with another #NATO state, that would be an internal conflict, and could almost certainly trigger the end of NATO itself.
#Putin must be very happy with his favorite "Useful Idiot."
#Greenland #NobelPrize #NobelPeacePrize #TrumpNobelPrize #Invasion #Military #MilitaryDeployment #DementiaDon #TrumpLunacy #NATOcrisis
The Greenland Gambit: Trump’s Arctic Appointment Tests NATO Unity
In a bold stroke of Arctic geopolitics, President Donald Trump’s appointment of a special envoy to Greenland has ignited a diplomatic firestorm, challenging the core principles of NATO and European sovereignty as the great powers circle the melting ice.
A Christmas Eve Diplomatic Earthquake
On December 22, 2025, from his Mar-a-Lago residence, President Donald Trump delivered a geopolitical surprise that instantly recalibrated Arctic politics. He announced the appointment of Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry as the United States Special Envoy to Greenland, a position without historical precedent.
“Jeff understands how essential Greenland is to our National Security,” Trump declared on Truth Social, “and will strongly advance our Country’s Interests for the Safety, Security, and Survival of our Allies, and indeed, the World.”
The response from Europe was swift and uncompromising. Within hours, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen issued a stark rejoinder on X, asserting: “Territorial integrity and sovereignty are fundamental principles of international law… We stand in full solidarity with Denmark and the people of Greenland.”
This exchange is not merely diplomatic friction; it represents a fundamental clash of visions for the Arctic’s future at a moment when melting polar ice caps are unlocking unprecedented strategic and economic possibilities.
The Strategic Prize: Why Greenland Matters in 2025
Greenland’s significance has been magnified by the accelerating effects of climate change. By 2025, the Northwest Passage is experiencing longer periods of navigability, transforming global shipping routes. The United States, Russia, and China are engaged in a silent competition for influence in what was once a frozen frontier.
For the U.S., Greenland represents:
Trump’s 2025 move can be seen as the operationalization of his earlier, dismissed idea of purchasing the island—a shift from acquisition to intensive, direct engagement.
The Sovereignty Breach: A Legal and Diplomatic Offense
The core of the international outcry lies in a clear violation of diplomatic protocol and sovereignty. Greenland, while self-governing in domestic affairs, remains part of the Kingdom of Denmark, which constitutionally manages its foreign, security, and defense policy.
The creation of a “Special Envoy” bypasses the Danish government entirely, establishing a direct channel between Washington and Nuuk. To Copenhagen and Brussels, this mirrors 19th-century “gunboat diplomacy” tactics, treating a sovereign ally’s territory as a sphere of influence. It undermines the very post-World War II international order that the U.S. helped build and that is based on the inviolability of borders.
Denmark’s Prime Minister, Mette Frederiksen, labeled the appointment “deeply regrettable and unacceptable,” stating it would be met with “firm and united resistance.” The move has unified a typically fractious Danish parliament against a common perceived threat.
The NATO Rift: An Alliance Under Stress
The crisis strikes at the heart of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Denmark has been a reliable NATO ally, exceeding the 2% GDP defense spending target and contributing forces to alliance missions. For it to be treated in this manner by the treaty’s leading power sends a chilling signal to all members, particularly the Baltic states and Poland, who rely on American commitment to collective defense.
The incident exacerbates an existing tension within NATO between:
This rift creates a strategic opening for Russia, which can exploit Western disunity to advance its own Arctic claims and energy projects with less coordinated opposition.
Greenland’s Dilemma: Between Autonomy and Great Power Politics
Caught in the middle are the 56,000 people of Greenland. The local government in Nuuk faces a complex calculus:
The risk for Greenland is becoming a proxy battleground, where its developmental and environmental choices are dictated by Washington, Beijing, or Moscow rather than Nuuk.
The Path Forward: Scenarios for a Fracturing Arctic
As we enter 2026, several scenarios could unfold from this crisis:
What is certain is that the Arctic will never again be a zone of low tension. President Trump’s Greenland gambit has made that a reality. It has demonstrated that in the new era of strategic competition, even the territories of close allies are subject to renegotiation based on raw power and national interest. The foundations of the transatlantic alliance, already strained, now face a cold, direct test in the warming North.
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#Arctic #ArcticGeopolitics #diplomacy #ForeignPolicy #Geopolitics #Greenland #NATO #NATOCrisis #sovereignty #USDenmarkRelations #USEU