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What next for Greenland and Denmark after discussions with Trump administration
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What next for Greenland and Denmark after discussions with Trump administration

the associated press • January 16, 2026, 09:16:29 IST
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Officials from Greenland, the US and Denmark met on Wednesday (January 14) to discuss Donald Trump’s ambitions to take over Greenland. The meeting was attended by Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen, Greenland’s Foreign Minister Vivian Motzfeldt and US Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Following the meet, Denmark is sending troops to Greenland to increase security over the Arctic land

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What next for Greenland and Denmark after discussions with Trump administration
A man rides by on a quad bike past a row of Greenlandic national flags in Nuuk, Greenland. File image/AP

US, Danish, and Greenlandic officials have met face-to-face to discuss President Donald Trump’s ambitions to take control of Greenland, a semiautonomous territory of Denmark. At the same time, Denmark and several European allies are sending troops to Greenland in a pointed signal of intent to boost the vast Arctic island’s security.

Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said after a meeting in Washington on Wednesday with his Greenlandic counterpart, US Vice President JD Vance, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio that a “fundamental disagreement” remained. He acknowledged that “we didn’t manage to change the American position” but said he hadn’t expected to.

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However, Wednesday’s events did point to ways ahead.

Searching for a compromise

Denmark, Greenland, and the US agreed to form a high-level working group “to explore if we can find a common way forward,” Lokke Rasmussen said. He added that he expects the group to hold its first meeting “within a matter of weeks.”

Danish and Greenlandic officials didn’t specify who would be part of the group or give other details. Lokke Rasmussen said the group should focus on how to address US security concerns while respecting Denmark’s “red lines.” The two countries are Nato allies.

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“Whether that is doable, I don’t know,” he added, holding out hope that the exercise could “take down the temperature.”

He wouldn’t elaborate on what a compromise might look like, and expectations are low. As Danish Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen put it Thursday, having the group is better than having no working group and “it’s a step in the right direction.” It will at least allow the two sides to talk with each other rather than about each other.

Trump has argued repeatedly that the US needs control of Greenland for its national security. He has sought to justify his calls for a US takeover by repeatedly claiming that China and Russia have their own designs on Greenland, which holds vast untapped reserves of critical minerals.

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Sending a military signal

Just as the talks were taking place in Washington on Wednesday, the Danish Defense Ministry announced that it was increasing its military presence in Greenland, along with Nato allies. France, Germany, Norway, and Sweden announced that they were each sending very small numbers of troops in a symbolic but pointed move signaling solidarity with Copenhagen.

Denmark’s Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen and Greenland’s Foreign Minister Vivian Motzfeldt speak at a news conference at the embassy of Denmark. File image/AP

The UK said one British officer was part of what it called a reconnaissance group for an Arctic endurance exercise. The German Defense Ministry, which dispatched 13 troops, said the aim is to sound out “possibilities to ensure security with a view to Russian and Chinese threats in the Arctic.” It said it was sending them on a joint flight from Denmark as “a strong signal of our unity.”

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Poulsen said that “the Danish Armed Forces, together with a number of Arctic and European allies, will explore in the coming weeks how an increased presence and exercise activity in the Arctic can be implemented in practice,” he said.

On Thursday, he said the intention was “to establish a more permanent military presence with a larger Danish contribution,” and to invite allies to take part in exercises and training on a rotating basis, according to Danish broadcaster DR.

While the European troops are largely symbolic at this point, the timing was no accident.

The deployment “serves both to send a political signal and military signal to America, but also indeed to recognise that Arctic security should be reinforced more,” said Maria Martisiute, an analyst at the European Policy Center in Brussels. “And first and foremost, this should be done through allied effort, not by the US coming and wanting to take it over. So it complicates the situation for the US.”

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Talking to Nato

The European efforts are Danish-led and not coordinated through Nato, which is dominated by the United States. But the European allies are keen to keep Nato in play, and Germany said that “the aim is to obtain a well-founded picture on the ground for further talks and planning within Nato.”

Poulsen has said he and Greenland’s foreign minister plan to meet Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte in Brussels on Monday to discuss security in and around the Arctic. Nato has been studying ways to bolster security in the Arctic region.

“I’m really looking forward to an announcement of some kind of military activity or deployment under Nato’s framework,” Martisiute said. “Otherwise there is indeed a risk that … Nato is paralysed, and that would not be good.”

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