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Greenland PM tells people to prepare for possible invasion

'It’s not likely there will be a military conflict, but it can’t be ruled out'

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Greenland’s prime minister said the Arctic island’s population and its authorities need to start preparing for a possible military invasion, even as it remains an unlikely scenario, as United States President Donald Trump continues to threaten taking over the territory.

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“It’s not likely there will be a military conflict, but it can’t be ruled out,” Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said at a press conference in capital Nuuk on Tuesday.

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Greenland’s government will form a task force consisting of representatives of all relevant local authorities to help people prepare for any disruptions to daily life, Nielsen said. The government is working on distributing new guidelines to the population, including a recommendation to have enough food for five days stored in their homes.

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Trump has said he needs to own Greenland for security reasons and had earlier on Tuesday posted an AI-generated image of himself planting a U.S. flag on the island. Greenland, with a population of 57,000, is part of the Kingdom of Denmark, but has its own government overseeing most aspects of life bar defence and foreign policy. Denmark has in recent days deployed more troops in Greenland to boost Arctic defence.

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Greenland is under “a lot of pressure” and “we need to be ready for all scenarios,” Mute B. Egede, the island’s minister of finance and former leader, said at the same news conference.

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Meanwhile, Canada’s military has modelled how it would respond to an American invasion after Trump publicly talked about the country as a potential 51st state, according to a report in the Globe and Mail, which cited unidentified officials who stressed they consider a U.S. invasion to be highly unlikely.

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In a move to shore up security of the territory, Denmark and seven other NATO countries last week deployed a handful of officers on the island as part of the Operation Arctic Endurance. Denmark’s Joint Arctic Command will now expand the military exercises to potentially run year-round, a Greenlandic newspaper reported on Tuesday.

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  1. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is considering sending a small contingent of troops to Greenland to join forces from Denmark, France, the United Kingdom and other nations for NATO exercises.
    Canada’s military has modelled hypothetical U.S. invasion, reports say
  2. Scott Bessent, founder and chief executive officer of Key Square Group LP, at an interview during the Republican National Convention (RNC) near the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S., on July 16, 2024.
    Bessent urges calm over Greenland, downplays treasuries risk
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The U.S. president on Saturday threatened to impose new tariffs from Feb. 1 on the eight North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies that are sending military personnel, escalating tensions between Washington and Europe. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen on Tuesday warned Europe would have to respond if the tariffs are implemented and that there could be “major consequences” on both sides of the Atlantic.

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“If a trade war is launched against us, which I cannot recommend, then we must of course respond. We would be forced to do so,” she said during a question and answer session in the Danish parliament. “I hope we do not get to that point. I hope that we succeed in convincing the Americans that this is not the path we should take.”

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Bloomberg.com

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    1. Comment by James Bolt.

      Hard to believe how far the US military has fallen.

    2. Comment by nicolai medtner.

      The way to get Greenland to join the U.S. in a commonwealth style status is for the U.S. to offer a large enough financial incentive to the Greenland citizens. Surely the U.S. can outbid the Danes.

      This would greatly increase the security of the North American continent, hopefully the Greenland citizenry will take the offer.

    3. Comment by Jesse Livermore.

      Fearmongering.

      Greenland doesn't want the US, to be sure. They also don't want Denmark. They want independence.

    4. Comment by dan seguin.

      If the US doesn't do it, Russia probably will.