The New York Times
After Trump’s Ultimatum, Greenland Talks Include Sovereign U.S. Bases, No Drilling for Russia
Negotiators have discussed proposals to check Russian and Chinese influence in the Arctic and transfer sovereignty over pockets of Greenlandic land to the United States, an idea opposed by Denmark.
Listen to this article · 6:26 min Learn more
Share full article
121
A person holds a camera, looking at a large, white-and-grey iceberg in dark, choppy water.
Icebergs in Scoresby Sound in Greenland. In a speech at Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, President Trump ruled out using military force to take the island.Credit...Esther Horvath for The New York Times
By Jim Tankersley Lara Jakes and Adam Goldman
Jim Tankersley reported from Berlin, and Lara Jakes and Adam Goldman from Brussels.
Jan. 22, 2026
Updated 12:43 p.m. ET
Negotiations to resolve the future of Greenland have focused in recent days on proposals to increase NATO’s presence in the Arctic, give America a sovereign claim to pockets of Greenland’s territory and block potentially hostile adversaries from mining the island’s minerals.
Those elements, described by eight senior Western security and diplomatic officials, offer the fullest picture yet of the contours of a potential Greenland compromise that President Trump announced on Wednesday without details. His move appeared to at least temporarily defuse an American-made trans-Atlantic crisis over the Danish territory.
Critically, the proposals under discussion would stop short of Mr. Trump’s goal of transferring ownership of all of Greenland to the United States from Denmark, according to the officials, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomacy. The officials cautioned that many details have yet to be finalized.
It is unclear if these discussions will ultimately yield agreement over the territory. Denmark, which publicly opposes ceding ownership of any Greenlandic land, may not agree to the plans on the table. Still, the officials said they were hopeful that they could simultaneously address Mr. Trump’s stated concerns about securing the Arctic against possible threats from Russia and China, while holding to Europe’s “red line” that Greenland was not for sale.
To do that, the proposals would:
Create a significant new NATO mission in the Arctic. Multiple officials have dubbed this mission “Arctic Sentry,” in a nod to similarly named NATO missions in the Baltic Sea and Eastern Europe that are meant to counter an increasingly aggressive Russia.
Update a pact signed between Denmark and the United States in 1951. The pact gives the U.S. military wide access to Greenland, an autonomous Danish territory, for operations including the construction and operation of military bases. American officials have said they are concerned that this access could be curbed or ended if Greenland were to obtain independence. NATO officials have discussed expanding the 1951 pact with a new agreement that would effectively create pockets of American soil in the territory.
Such an agreement would likely be modeled on a “sovereign base area” agreement in Cyprus, where Britain’s military bases are regarded as British territory. That would give the United States greater control over the land than it currently exerts over U.S. embassy sites. Mr. Trump and other officials have said that territory in Greenland could prove important for his plans to build a so-called Golden Dome missile defense system for the United States, which could include components stationed in Greenland.
Restrict non-NATO member countries, particularly Russia and China, from obtaining rights to mine the rare-earth minerals that lie deep under Greenland’s ice sheet.
All of those plans have been under discussion inside NATO over the last year, as a direct response to Mr. Trump’s stated ambitions. Since returning to the White House in 2025, Mr. Trump has described publicly, with increasing intensity, his desire to own Greenland. Denmark, with equal intensity, has insisted it would not sell, with Danish leaders saying that the island’s fate is up to Denmark, not NATO. Greenland’s prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, said on Thursday he was not in favor of giving the United States sovereignty over military bases there. “We are ready to discuss a lot of things,” Mr. Nielsen said, adding, “Sovereignty is a red line.”
Editors’ Picks
How Little Exercise Can You Get Away With?
Forget the Cynics. Here’s Why You Should Get Your Dog a Stroller.
Inside an Exploding Marriage: Belle Burden in Her Own Words
Image
A large crowd fills a city square, many holding small red and white flags. Buildings and a statue are in the background.
Demonstrators waving the Greenland flag in Copenhagen on Saturday.Credit...Hilary Swift for The New York Times
The idea of giving the U.S. a sovereign claim to its bases in Greenland, similar to Britain’s bases in Cyprus, was raised among NATO and Western military officials on Wednesday, according to two officials, one of whom was present in those discussions. Asked for comment, Gen. Alexus G. Grynkewich, the top NATO commander in Europe, said in a brief conversation with The New York Times on Thursday that the idea was discussed as a matter for political leaders to resolve rather than the military.
What you should know. The Times makes a careful decision any time it uses an anonymous source. The information the source supplies must be newsworthy and give readers genuine insight.
Learn more about our process.
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen of Denmark did not respond to a request for comment. But in a public statement on Thursday, posted on social media, she appeared to accept some of the details under discussion while rejecting others, including the idea of transferring ownership of any part of Greenland.
“We can negotiate on everything political; security, investments, economy. But we cannot negotiate on our sovereignty,” the statement said.
Mr. Trump gave almost no details of the agreement on Wednesday evening, in brief interviews with reporters in Davos that followed it, or in his public statements on social media.
Trump Administration: Live Updates
Updated
Jan. 22, 2026, 2:19 p.m. ET27 minutes ago
The House votes to strip senators of a new avenue to sue the government.
Zelensky says Europe must stand up to Trump and Russia or be left behind.
Denmark bristles at the idea of giving up any sovereignty in Greenland.
Asked about the proposed agreement, Adm. Giuseppe Cavo Dragone, the Italian chairman of the NATO Military Committee, said at a press briefing on Thursday that officials were “at the very early stage” of creating a framework for securing the Arctic and Greenland.
General Grynkewich said, “We’ve done no planning yet” for the joint Arctic operations. He added, “We have not received political guidance to move out.”
There was a spreading sense of relief on Thursday among European leaders that the escalating crisis over Greenland had been defused.
Image
Donald Trump, wearing a blue suit and red tie, speaks at a podium with a raised hand. A microphone is in front of him.
Mr. Trump addressing the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times
In a speech in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, Mr. Trump ruled out using military force to take the island but raised the specter of imposing economic pain on allies if he didn’t get what he wanted.
Then, that evening, he abruptly announced he had reached a deal with Mr. Rutte, and he called off the tariffs he had planned to impose on imports from Denmark and many of the European countries that had risen to its defense over Greenland.
Some European leaders on Thursday welcomed Mr. Trump’s announcement and expressed optimism that it would eventually result in a victory for Arctic security and NATO unity.
“We will protect Denmark, Greenland, the north, from the threat posed by Russia,” Friedrich Merz, the chancellor of Germany, said in a speech at Davos on Thursday morning.
“We will uphold the principles on which the trans-Atlantic partnership is founded, namely sovereignty and territory,” Mr. Merz said. “We support talks between Denmark, Greenland, the United States on the basis of these principles.”
Jeanna Smialek contributed reporting from Brussels, and Amelia Nierenberg from London.
Jim Tankersley is the Berlin bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
Lara Jakes, a Times reporter based in Rome, reports on conflict and diplomacy, with a focus on weapons and the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East. She has been a journalist for more than 30 years.
Adam Goldman is a London-based reporter for The Times who writes about global security.
No comments:
Post a Comment