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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:
Currently horrified by the notion that this might be practically impossible for Trump to accomplish simply because it would secure his legacy - and so any anti-Trump successor would have a strong incentive to just hand it back to Denmark for partisan signaling reasons. Any legacy Trump wants to leave needs to be durable against a predictable successor every few years who wants to repudiate and smash it.
I think it would be incumbent on Trump to make Greenland useful if he wants this not to happen. If Trump actually does something important with Greenland, like establishing a valuable mining operation or clarifying its military importance, this introduces friction that may prevent anti-Trump operatives from giving it up so easily. There will be blowback in taking Greenland, and there will be blowback in any event of returning it. It will be much harder for the territory to be a lasting part of Trump's impact if its only utility is "yeah Trump got us Trump land for some reason."
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