NATO is reportedly mulling a proposal to Donald Trump that would ease tensions caused by the US president's fixation with annexing Greenland.
President Donald Trump’s bid for the island is an old idea without much appeal among modern drillers and miners, analysts say.
A fight over the future of the world's biggest island is turning up the heat between Nuuk, Copenhagen, Brussels and Washington.
At the end of the interview, Qarsoq Høegh-Dam, a top official with the Naleraq party and an adviser to Olsen, popped in to say hello. Høegh-Dam is a gregarious politico, of a familiar sort you often find in insular government towns. He said he was trying to organize a “watch party” for Trump’s inauguration.
The move comes after President Donald Trump voiced his desire to acquire Greenland and refused to rule out using military force.
For years, Denmark scrimped on military spending for the strategic island. Now, Trump says America must own the territory.
In a groundbreaking move that echoes Jamie Dimon’s 2024 Davos predictions about tokenization revolutionizing real estate markets, Lympid, the rapidly growing RWA tokenization platform, is announcing the successful acquisition and upcoming tokenization of its first property in Greenland.
In a city of around 19.000 and with hospitality services close to full capacity, the bar for over-tourism is low.
What drives the United States’ bold geopolitical ambitions toward Greenland and Canada? It boils down to economic and national security.
NUUK, GREENLAND — I clearly recall the factoid from high school geography, that Iceland was purposefully deceptively named and is actually quite green, and that Greenland is largely a huge slab of ice. Though not quite as icy as it used to be. But more on less ice later.
The anticipated tourism growth comes amid heightened global attention on Greenland, fueled by U.S. President Donald Trump’s renewed interest in acquiring the island—an autonomous territory of Denmark—since his reelection in November. Trump has suggested he may use economic or military influence to persuade Denmark to relinquish control.
The road south from Greenland’s capital, Nuuk, runs out at the tip of a blizzard-scoured peninsula stretching into the Labrador Sea. Icebergs drift beyond the sea ice toward the open ocean, carved off the glacier some 100 kilometers away at the head of the Nuup Kangerlua fjord.