Greenland in the news! Contention over Greenland! NATO roiled by tensions over Greenland! War threatens! Film at eleven!
I know, I know: you’ve been there. Actually, for those with short memories, I too have been there, and if the tune is the same, the words differ somewhat:
President Donald Trump and his top officials have framed their drive for Greenland — a semi-autonomous Danish territory — as all about U.S. national security, broader NATO footprints in the increasingly competitive Arctic and grabbing critical minerals.
This is a somewhat thin justification. The U.S. has for many decades had a defense agreement with Copenhagen to keep a military presence in Greenland.
Plus, much of the concern plaguing Europe for the last year is built on a fear of the U.S. pulling away from the continent — not committing more American troops to a region NATO is desperate to safeguard against growing Russian and Chinese influence.
Please read the rest. It’s not bad for a Newsweek article. But most of the salient points are already part of public discourse.
There’s a strange feel to President Trump’s desire that Greenland become a part of the U.S. Since this is the second time around for this initiative, I have to wonder whether America’s national interests are his real reasons for pursuing it.
A few things that Greenland is not:
- It’s not arable.
- It’s not “living space.”
- It’s not easily exploitable.
I’m told it’s valuable for military purposes. I’ll accept that; many harsh places stand guard over strategic travel routes, and the North Atlantic is forever full of vessels, both surface and subsurface, that bear watching. But the U.S. already has military bases on Greenland. Denmark, which claims sovereignty over Greenland, has expressed willingness that American military exploitation of Greenland should increase.
I’m also told that Greenland is rich in natural resources. That may be so, but again, the Danish government has been accommodating toward commercial exploitation of Greenland’s resources. We must ask why the formal acquisition of Greenland – its transfer from Denmark’s jurisdiction to ours – matters so greatly to President Trump.
The simplest explanation may be the correct one: Trump’s a real-estate man. Any real-estate man would rather own than lease. And there are possible advantages in not having to bargain with another power for the use of Greenland. But responsibility for the people of Greenland would come with it.
Another, somewhat darker explanation, would be that contention over Greenland makes an ideal lever by which to pull the U.S. out of NATO. NATO is the conduit through which American resources are pulled into Europe. The drain NATO places on American military power and funding was the original reason that President Nixon ended the redeemability of the dollar in gold. Fomenting discord over Greenland might be an indirect method for ending NATO, an alliance long overdue for dissolution.
There’s been talk about a morphing of the Monroe Doctrine into a “Donroe Doctrine,” under which American authority and responsibility for the Western Hemisphere would justify enfolding Greenland. That’s a bit thin. Greenland isn’t really part of the Western Hemisphere, and as previously stated, our military is already there.
A minor possibility is that the matter is ego-driven: President Trump may envision American acquisition of Greenland as securing his place in the history books. It would be America’s largest territorial acquisition, edging out the Louisiana Purchase. That would be an impressive enlargement of the U.S., but in practical terms it would change almost nothing. Anyway, President Trump’s place in the books is already secure for other reasons, and I’m sure he knows it.
Finally, there’s this: Back in the days of the Plantagenets, it was a common practice for the king to “give” a province to a brother or son. If President Trump is thinking of Greenland as a college-graduation gift for Barron, I’d suggest a snowglobe instead. Young men don’t often cherish such gifts for long. They thank Dad for them, but soon enough they stick them in the back of the closet and forget them. There they languish until their wives-to-be decree a “cleanup” that sees them left at the curb for the recyclers. No one would want to see Greenland suffer that fate. Especially the Greenlanders.
Anyway, I still think if we’re going to go national-real-estate shopping, we should buy Canada. The National Hockey League Hall Of Fame really belongs in America, don’t you think?
It is a confluence of geography and science. There is one place on earth where all the Russian ICBM's would be vulnerable and that is over Greenland. With the global warming and the likelihood of a Northwest passage opening up any ship using that route would sail close to Greenland for a good portion of it's journey. And the biggest beneficiary of such a route would be China and their belt and road agenda. Also there is a world renowned fishing ground in the North Atlantic that is controlled and protected by mutual agreements with the neighboring countries. This fishing ground is protected from aggressive predatory Chinese fishing fleets by the distance and difficulty of sailing to it. If a Northwest passage does open up it is likely that China will decimate the fish stocks before they could be stopped. Europe is less affected by most of these facts and they are actually and truthfully uninterested in Greenland. All of the heated rhetoric from Europe about Greenland is directed at Trump and that is only because Trump is a threat to their socialism agenda for Europe. Greenlanders have been open to a warming relationship to America but the communist regimes and the budding EU socialist regimes have decided to up the rhetoric and propaganda inside Greenland to scare them away from America. The bottom line is that there is a worldwide effort to install socialism and fight democracy and freedom and the Greenland issue is being used to rally those forces. Nuclear war threatens, that isn't hyperbole it is a scary fact. Greenland is geographically positioned to cramp any effective nuclear attack. Not immediately, a specialized anti-missile system would need to be installed but the potential is so great that Russia and China feel compelled to prevent that possibility.
ReplyDeleteAs in most real estate transactions, it's Location, Location, Location.
ReplyDelete1) Keeps the ocean transit to EU and other spots from being blocked by a squeeze play between Russia and the Almost Islamic United Kingdom and other Western Europe countries.
2) Yes, rich in natural resources, but also, unlike the USA, not vulnerable to lobbying against mining/use blocked by Enviro-Radicals.
3) Keeps a spot too near for to the Americas from being taken over by another country. Now, Denmark may have noble Intentions to protect that land, but they really haven't the ability, nor the manpower, should a bigger power come into play.
4) Essentially an immobile aircraft carrier/launchpad for our Air Force.
5) If we don't do it, China WILL.
"Greenland isn’t really part of the Western Hemisphere"
ReplyDeleteYou sure about that?