In mid-January 2026, ahead of a meeting at the
White House involving officials from Greenland, Denmark and the United States, Denmark announced a strengthening of its military presence in Greenland while working with
NATO allies to increase activity in the Arctic. Meanwhile, France said it plans to open a
consulate in Greenland on 6 February, 2026. A bipartisan
US-Congressional delegation visited
Copenhagen, to display unity and ease tensions, while
special envoy Jeff Landry posted on social media that he would help "make Greenland part of the U.S." Greenlanders are reported to refute
US-president Trump’s narrative of an imminent
Chinese and
Russian threat. Europeans are working on a response to Mr. Trump’s pressure campaign. Already, Denmark had announced a $ 2 billion military expansion in the Arctic. At the same time, some
Silicon Valley tech investors are promoting Greenland as a site for a
libertarian utopia (
freedom city). Greenland's Prime Minister
Jens-Frederik Nielsen is not in favor of a deal with the United States granting sovereignty for
American military bases on Greenland. According to Julie Rademacher, president of
Uagut, the national organisation for Greenlanders in Denmark, Greenlandic high trust society "is built on values that clash sharply with modern American political culture: collectivism over individualism, trust over spectacle, continuity over disruption, modesty over hyperbole, and nature as an
intrinsic value — not a resource to be 'unlocked'." In February 2026 Canada and France opened Greenland consulates. As a show of solidarity Canada’s first Indigenous
governor general,
Mary Simon, was greeted in Nuuk by several dozen of the 90 Canadian Inuit who had flown in. The EU has been represented on Greenland since 2024. ==See also==