A few years back on my bucket-list trip to Iceland I saw regular flights to Greenland advertised in a Reykjavik travel agents’ window. I was mildly interested but did not inquire further, mainly through time constraints but also because I knew nothing about the destination.
His quite reasonable position has found support among Denmark’s partners in the European Union, with France, Germany, the UK and the Netherlands sending token forces to Greenland in an attempt to show the island’s security can be left safely in the hands of NATO’s European partners without any change of sovereignty.
This has apparently outraged Trump who is threatening to slap a 10 per cent tariff on imports from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, Netherlands and Finland if they do not fall into line with his plan to “purchase” Greenland.
Greenlanders have reacted by taking to the streets of Nuuk in an unprecedented show of defiance shouting slogans such as “Greenland is not for sale” and “Hands off Greenland”.
One marcher said that while Greenlanders had never wanted it, they were now at the forefront of the fight for democracy and human rights.
Will Trump back down? There is an obvious way out as the US has a long-established military base in Greenland that could be expanded to address any security concerns without infringing the island’s sovereignty. The takeover plan also happens to be deeply unpopular with Americans, with just 17 per cent approving of it in a recent poll, dismissed by Trump as “fake”.
While it appears that Trump has backed himself into a corner, with his very particular brand of politics and diplomacy it is quite possible he may take the expanded base option and claim that was his objective all along.
If nothing else, the latest White House brouhaha has given us all a lesson in the history and geography of this remote Arctic island and its people.

No comments:
Post a Comment