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Donald Trump has announced that the United States will gain “total access” to Greenland under a new arrangement with NATO allies.
In addition, the former President revealed plans to construct part of America’s “Golden Dome” missile defense system on the island.
During an interview with Fox Business anchor Maria Bartiromo at the World Economic Forum, Trump stated, “Essentially, it’s total access. There’s no end, there’s no time limit.”
He elaborated, “I’m not going to have to pay anything. We’re going to have total access to Greenland. We will have all the military access we want. We’re going to be able to place what we need on Greenland because we want it. This is about national security and international security.”
While talks with NATO are still in their early stages, the specifics of the final agreement remain uncertain.
Reports indicate that the U.S. military already operates several bases across the Danish territory and may have the opportunity to expand further in the future.
Top NATO military officials on Wednesday held a meeting with Trump administration officials to discuss Denmark ceding ‘small pockets of Greenlandic’ territory to the US where it could build bases, senior officials told The New York Times.
The agreement was compared by the sources to UK military bases in Cyprus which are treated as sovereign British territories.
Trump told Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo that the US would have ‘total access’ to Greenland
The President also vowed to use Greenland to help build the ‘Golden Dome’ missile defense system
Trump claimed there would be no end or time limit to America’s ‘total access’ to Greenland as part of the preliminary deal over the Danish territory
Trump did not immediately give details of the deal but said NATO would work with the US to build his Golden Dome missile defense system and share mineral rights.
‘If the bad guys start shooting, it comes over Greenland,’ Trump told Bartiromo. ‘So we knock it down.’
Trump’s latest statement also comes after he pulled back hefty tariffs on European countries as part of his initiative to take over Greenland.
On Wednesday, Trump said ‘additional discussions’ were ongoing regarding Greenland and that Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff were ‘responsible for the negotiations’.
Trump told reporters in Davos that the deal will be ‘put out pretty soon’.
‘It gets us everything we needed to get,’ he insisted, adding: ‘It’s a deal that everybody’s very happy with.’
The stock market bounced back immediately after crashing on Tuesday over his tariff threats. Futures markets were back in the green on Wednesday morning.
Trump on Saturday threatened Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Finland with a 10 per cent tariff starting on February 1 after they sent troops to Greenland.
Donald Trump (right) announced he struck a deal with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte (left) in Davos today to halt tariffs in Europe amid a breakthrough in Greenland negotiations
Since starting his second-term, the president has suggested the US should acquire Greenland to stop Russia and China from taking over strategic positioning in the Arctic region.
The Danish territory provides strategic access to the Arctic, where China and Russia have, in recent years, flexed their geopolitical might as the melting polar ice provides greater access to shipping lanes and natural resources.
Greenland, which houses NATO military bases, is also rich in oil, gold, graphite, copper, iron, and other rare earth elements.
The Trump administration believes Greenland could provide infrastructure for the proposed Golden Dome missile defense system to protect North America from ballistic threats.