Greenland PM Rejects U.S. Takeover Proposals, Says “We Choose Denmark”
Greenland's government reaffirmed its sovereignty under Denmark despite U.S. security and resource interests amid a geopolitical crisis, choosing alliance over American acquisition threats.
- During a Jan 13 statement in Copenhagen, Greenland Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen declared the territory would choose Denmark over the United States amid a geopolitical crisis.
- U.S. President Donald Trump renewed interest in Greenland, stoking tensions on Jan 11 by saying the United States would take the territory `one way or the other`, while White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said `all options are always on the table`.
- The U.S. Geological Survey found Greenland holds significant oil, gas, and rare earth minerals, but extraction is difficult due to harsh climate and the 2021 ban on new offshore exploration.
- Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen and Greenlandic Foreign Minister Vivian Motzfeldt requested a Jan 14 White House meeting with U.S. Vice-President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, while European leaders stressed NATO’s role in Greenland’s defence last week.
- Aaja Chemnitz, Greenlandic politician in the Danish parliament, said most of Greenland's 56,000 people reject U.S. citizenship, the Greenland governing coalition rejected takeover plans, and observers warn of NATO risks.
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65 Articles
Jens-Frederik Nielsen stated that the island nation does not want to become the 51st state of the USA.
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Inuit advocacy groups, as well as Greenlanders who live in Canada, are emphatically opposed to American designs on their homeland. And, they say, they're tired of being used as a geopolitical chess pieces by powerful people in faraway capitals.
Should the U.S. own Greenland? Risch, Idaho’s other federal lawmakers won’t say
President Donald Trump’s efforts to annex Greenland, the Arctic island territory that’s part of Denmark, has met no public pushback from any of Idaho’s federal lawmakers.None of the state’s four Republicans in Washington, D.C., including U.S. Sen. Jim Risch – who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee – has put forth their stance on the simmering international issue. Its concept has drawn scorn from European partner nations and recent obj…
The leadership in Greenland again rejects Donald Trump's claim to ownership. At a performance with Danish Prime Minister Frederiksen, head of government Jens-Frederik Nielsen said: "It's better to stick to Copenhagen.
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