Trump, NATO, and the Arctic: Why Greenland suddenly sits at the centre of global power
Greenland isn’t just ice and snow. From missile defence to rare-earth minerals and Arctic shipping lanes, here’s why Trump—and the world—see the island as a strategic prize.
- Jan 9, 2026,
- Updated Jan 9, 2026 5:41 PM IST

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Beneath Greenland’s ice lies a geopolitical jackpot. From missile-warning radars to rare-earth minerals, the island packs outsized strategic weight. Defence analysts say climate change is stripping away ice—and exposing power—faster than diplomacy can keep up.

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Greenland sits at the centre of a high-stakes Arctic board game. Wedged between the US and Russia, it oversees vital air and sea corridors. NATO planners quietly describe it as the “queen square” of northern defence strategy.

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At Pituffik Space Base, US radar systems stare north, watching for missile launches across the polar arc. Military experts note that this early-warning edge could shave critical minutes off response times—minutes that decide wars.

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Greenland hosts 25 of the EU’s 34 critical raw materials, including rare earths vital for EVs, wind turbines, and advanced weapons. With China dominating supply, Western governments see Greenland as a strategic escape hatch.

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As Arctic ice retreats, new shipping lanes emerge—shorter, faster, and harder to police. Maritime economists warn these routes could reshape global trade, making Greenland a gatekeeper to tomorrow’s sea highways.

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US interest isn’t new. From WWII airbases to Cold War surveillance, Greenland has long been a silent sentinel. Trump’s rhetoric revives an old instinct: control geography before rivals do.

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Trump’s comments jolted allies. Denmark warns that forced moves could fracture NATO unity. European leaders insist Greenland’s future isn’t a bargaining chip—but a test of alliance values.

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Greenland’s 57,000 residents are often missing from grand strategy maps. Local leaders stress self-determination, pushing back against annexation fantasies while navigating superpower attention with wary pragmatism.

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What looks like a land grab is really climate geopolitics. As ice melts, power shifts. Analysts argue Greenland isn’t about territory—it’s about who controls the post-ice world.
