Trump Vows US Will Acquire Greenland, Warns of Russia-China Threat

President Donald Trump has declared the United States will acquire Greenland, stating that failure to do so would allow Russia or China to gain control of the strategic Arctic territory. He insisted the outcome was inevitable, preferring a negotiated deal but emphasizing the need for full ownership, not just a military presence. Trump dismissed potential NATO concerns and downplayed Greenland's current defenses. The autonomous Danish territory is increasingly vital due to emerging Arctic shipping routes and growing Russian and Chinese military activity.

Key Points: Trump Says US Will Acquire Greenland to Counter Russia, China

  • US aims to acquire Greenland
  • Strategic Arctic territory at stake
  • Warns of Russian and Chinese control
  • Dismisses NATO concerns
  • Prefers deal but insists on ownership
2 min read

Trump says US will have Greenland

President Trump declares the US will acquire Greenland, warning Russia or China will control the strategic Arctic territory if America doesn't.

"If we don't take Greenland, Russia or China will, - Donald Trump"

Washington, Jan 12

President Donald Trump said the United States will acquire Greenland, warning that failure to do so would allow Russia or China to gain control of the strategic Arctic territory.

"If we don't take Greenland, Russia or China will," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One. "And I'm not letting that happen."

Trump said he preferred a negotiated agreement but insisted the outcome was inevitable. "I'd rather - I'd love to make a deal with 'em. It's easier," he said. "But one way or the other, we're gonna have Greenland."

Asked whether military action was being considered, Trump said the US focus was on ownership. "We're talking about acquiring, not leasing, not having it short term. We're talking about acquiring," he said.

He dismissed concerns that such a move could undermine NATO. "I'm the one that saved NATO," Trump said, adding that alliance members were now paying "5 per cent of GDP."

Trump downplayed Greenland's current defenses. "Basically their defense is two dog sleds," he said, contrasting that with the presence of "Russian destroyers and submarines and Chinese destroyers and submarines all over the place."

He said the US military presence alone was insufficient. "You need ownership. You really need a title, as they say in the real estate business," Trump said.

Asked whether Denmark had been presented with a formal offer, Trump said no. "I haven't done that, but Greenland should make the deal," he said.

Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, holds strategic importance due to its location in the Arctic and its proximity to emerging shipping routes and military corridors.

The US already maintains a military presence in Greenland, and Arctic security has become a growing concern amid increased Russian and Chinese activity in the region.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
From an Indian perspective, this shows how superpowers still think in colonial terms. "Acquiring" territory? It's 2025. The language itself is problematic. Greenland's people and Denmark should have the final say, not be treated as a chess piece in a US-China-Russia game.
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Aman W
Strategically, he has a point about the Arctic becoming a new frontier. With climate change opening routes, control matters. But the approach is all wrong. You can't just "acquire" a place and its people. Partnership, not ownership, is the way forward.
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Sarah B
"Two dog sleds" – what a disrespectful way to talk about another country's defense! This kind of rhetoric undermines any serious discussion about Arctic security. It's just chest-thumping.
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Vikram M
As an Indian, I find this fascinating. The great powers are scrambling for the Arctic while we focus on our own development in the Indian Ocean Region. Maybe there's a lesson here about securing our own strategic interests quietly and effectively, without the bluster.
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Karthik V
The real story is the silent expansion of China and Russia in the polar regions. Trump's method is crude, but he's highlighting a genuine security concern that Europe has been slow to address. NATO needs a coherent Arctic strategy, not just reactions to Trump's tweets.

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