European troops arrive in Greenland as talks with US hit wall over future
Soldiers from France, Germany and other European countries have begun arriving in Greenland to help boost the Arctic island’s security after talks involving Denmark, Greenland and the United States highlighted “fundamental disagreement” between President Donald Trump’s administration and its European allies.
France has already sent 15 soldiers and Germany 13. Norway and Sweden are also participating.
- list 1 of 3France to launch Greenland consulate in ‘political signal’ to US
- list 2 of 3Greenlanders worry over Trump’s threats as they welcome back the sun
- list 3 of 3Danish FM says US ‘conquer’ of Greenland not acceptable
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The mission has been described as a recognition-of-the-territory exercise with troops to plant the European Union’s flag on Greenland as a symbolic act.
“The first French military elements are already en route” and “others will follow”, French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday as French authorities said soldiers from the country’s mountain infantry unit were already in Nuuk, Greenland’s capital.
France said the two-day mission is a way to show that EU troops can be quickly deployed if needed.
Meanwhile, Germany’s Ministry of Defence said it was deploying a reconnaissance team of 13 personnel to Greenland on Thursday.
Denmark announced its plans to increase its own military presence in Greenland on Wednesday as the Danish and Greenlandic foreign ministers met with White House representatives in Washington, DC, to discuss Trump’s intentions to take over the semiautonomous Danish territory to tap its mineral resources amid rising Russian and Chinese interest.

But the two foreign ministers emerged from the meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance having made little progress in dissuading Washington from seeking to take over Greenland.
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“We didn’t manage to change the American position,” Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told reporters. “It’s clear that the president has this wish of conquering over Greenland.”
His Greenlandic counterpart, Vivian Motzfeldt, called for cooperation with the US but said that does not mean the country wants to be “owned by the United States”.
The pair announced their intent to establish a working group to continue to address concerns about control over Greenland and security in the Arctic.
“We really need it [Greenland],” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office after Wednesday’s meeting. “If we don’t go in, Russia is going to go in, and China is going to go in. And there’s not a thing Denmark can do about it, but we can do everything about it.”
Trump said he had not yet been briefed about the contents of the White House meeting when he made his remarks.
On Thursday, Moscow criticised “references to certain activity of Russia and China around Greenland as a reason for the current escalation”.
“First they came up with the idea that there were some aggressors, and then that they were ready to protect someone from these aggressors,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said of the West’s actions on Greenland.
The current situation, she said, “demonstrates with particular acuteness the inconsistency of the so-called ‘rules-based world order’ being built by the West,” she said.
“We stand in solidarity with China’s position on the unacceptability of references to certain activity of Russia and China around Greenland as a reason for the current escalation,” Zakharova said.
The prospect of the US descending on Greenland to tap its minerals has struck fear into Inuit communities around the town of Ilulissat, perched beside an ice fjord on the western side of the island.
Before Wednesday’s meeting, Inuit Greenlander Karl Sandgreen, head of the Ilulissat Icefjord visitor centre, told Al Jazeera: “My hope is that Rubio is going to have some humanity in that talk.”
His fears are for the Inuit way of life.
“We are totally different. We are Inuit, and we’ve been living here for thousands of years.” he said. “This is my daughter’s and my son’s future, not a future for people who are thinking about resources.”
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