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Notes -
USA really, seriously wants to own Greenland.
Trump has made this extremely clear ever since his first presidency when he first offered to buy the island from the Danish government. At the time, the Danes made it very clear that this was not possible. They could not legally sell the island, and if they could, it still would not be for sale. This presidency, he has been probing around, trying to find an effective strategy that can give the administration what they want. He made that clear in 2025 by essentially stating that no tactic is off the table. He has since attempted the following:
This begs the question though: Why does the US want Greenland so badly? It is a frozen rock in the middle of the ocean, with an entire population living off government subsidies. Why not just let Denmark pay the bill while the states keep their bases? I have some ideas below, ordered from what I think makes the least sense to the most:
Perhaps you could point me to the time in history when this wasn't the case? There is no turning, there is no change, there is not even a policy difference. Only rhetoric. As you note, the US has had a military and resource interest in Greenland for a century. We already have access, we already took the place over once. The only thing that's new is Trump saying things on Truth Social. Trump is vocalizing actual US policy, as opposed to the fake policy everyone else pretends we're doing for PR reasons. Real international politiks are real.
The new thing here is that the US is no longer trying to work together with the EU and NATO countries. It used to be that these bodies were responsible for enforcing UN laws in the world. Now, the US is putting immense strain on its alliances and trying to go at it alone, going so far as to threaten an ally. As a result, the rules are changing. When the main enforcer of international laws ceases to enforce them, international law no longer exists.
As for Greenland, there is a significant difference between having military bases there and officially being in charge. Right now, the US has no sway over local laws, and Denmark is subsidizing the population. Both of these things would change with a takeover.
There's no such thing as "UN laws." Quite the opposite: the UN goes out of its way to recognize national sovereignty. It has "resolutions" and "conventions" and "peacekeeping actions" but very little hard power. No country, least of all the US, would allow the UN to mess with its own internal affairs if they didn't want to. EG, it doesn't really matter that most of the UN has ratified the ban on landmines because the US, China, and Russia never agreed, and a lot of the countries that did sign that ban are still using them and simply lying about it.
Where the UN did work well is simply being a neutral ground for diplomats to come together and talk, including some very hostile nations during tough times. But that only works as long as people understand what the real game is. I think sometimes smaller nations forget how powerless then UN is, because it flatters themselves think of themselves as equal parterns in this grand international community. But the real world doesn't work that way, and any sort of treaty only lasts as long as both sides are willing to honor it.
NATO has sent troops into sovereign countries as the result of security council decisions in the past (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NATO_operations). In addition, the US and EU have enforced sanctions in unison against countries who threatened the established world order, attempting to force them into compliance. This is not nothing, and this era is currently changing in front of our eyes.
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