Denmark bolstering defense in Greenland after Trump's calls for the U.S. to own the territory
Denmark is bolstering defense spending in Greenland, said a Danish official Tuesday who called the announcement's timing with President-elect Trump's suggestion that the U.S. should own the territory an "irony of fate."
The big picture: Danish Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen told the outlet Jyllands-Posten on Tuesday that Denmark would spend a "double-digit billion amount" in krone equivalent to at least $1.5 billion on the self-ruled territory that's part of its kingdom to ensure a "stronger presence" in the Arctic.
- Trump said on the Sunday the "ownership and control of Greenland is an absolute necessity" for the U.S., which has a strategically important base on the northwest coast of the territory.
- His remarks that built on comments he made during his first term about buying Greenland prompted the territory's prime minister to say on Monday that it is "not for sale and will never be for sale."
State of play: Poulsen noted in his interview that Denmark had "not invested enough" for many years in in the Arctic — where countries including China and Russia have been racing for resources in the region that's feeling the effects of climate change.
- Russia has already sought to claim territory up to Greenland's Exclusive Economic Zone.
Between the lines: The Danish Defense Academy's Army Maj. Steen Kjaergaard told the BBC Tuesday that Trump may have been pressing Denmark's government to act on this threat.
- "It is likely to be sparked by the renewed Trump focus on the need for air and maritime control around Greenland and the internal developments in Greenland where some are voicing a will to look towards the U.S. — a new international airport in Nuuk was just inaugurated," Kjaergaard said.
- "Trump is smart… he gets Denmark to prioritize its Arctic military capabilities by raising this voice, without having to take over a very un-American welfare system," he added, in reference to Greenland's reliance on money from Copenhagen.
Zoom in: The United States' Pituffik Space Base (formerly Thule Air Base) has a missile early warning radar that can detect Russian missiles.
- The base once sought to secretly store a nuclear reactor under an Arctic ice sheet called Camp Century during the Cold War era, also known as the "city under the ice," in a drive called Project Iceworm.
- Representatives for Trump did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment in the evening.
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Editor's note: Andrew Freedman contributed reporting.