John Fedup

The Bunker Group

Vivendi

Well-Known Member
Official statement from Danish DefMin (translated into English). Mentions NATO allies or (European) allies 8 times, and in addition lists explicitly Germany, France, Sweden and Norway. Pretty strong signaling.

As part of the increased presence in the Arctic and the North Atlantic, the Armed Forces will from today deploy capabilities and units in connection with exercise activities, which will mean that in the near future there will be an increased military presence in and around Greenland of aircraft, ships and soldiers, including from NATO allies.

In 2026, the exercise activities may consist of, among other things, guarding critical installations in society, assistance to authorities in Greenland, including the police, receiving allied troops, deploying fighter jets in and around Greenland and naval task solving.

The Arctic Command will continuously inform the citizens of Greenland about the activities and be in close dialogue with relevant Greenlandic authorities and core actors.

Background for the initiatives
In the summer of 2025, the Armed Forces strengthened their presence and exercise activity in and around Greenland with a number of initiatives and capabilities, including contributions from allies such as Germany, France, Sweden and Norway. The initiatives involved the deployment of capabilities at sea, on land and in the air, as well as exercises related to the protection of Greenland's critical infrastructure.

The Government of Greenland and the Ministry of Defence continue to cooperate closely on the initiatives to ensure local involvement and insight into local conditions.

Minister of Foreign Affairs and Research Vivian Motzfeldt says: "As part of the NATO alliance, it is a core priority for the Government of Greenland that the defence and security in and around Greenland is strengthened, and that this is done in close cooperation with our NATO allies. The Ministry of Defence and the Government of Greenland work closely together to initiate initiatives and cooperation among both our Arctic and European allies. Once the exercises start, the Greenlandic population will be continuously informed about the activities via the Arctic Command's platforms."

Minister of Defence Troels Lund Poulsen said: "Security in the Arctic is of vital importance to the Kingdom and our Arctic allies, and it is therefore important that we further strengthen our ability to operate in the region in close cooperation with allies. We have done this in 2025, and in a natural continuation of the effort, we will continue and expand the collaboration in 2026. In the coming weeks, the Armed Forces, together with a number of Arctic and European allies, will explore how an increased presence and exercise activity in the Arctic can take place."
The Armed Forces increase their presence and continue with exercises in Greenland in close cooperation with allies
 

SolarisKenzo

Well-Known Member
Iceland Prime Minister just left Bruxelles after an unscheduled meeting today with EU Commission President.
The country will propose a referendum to join the European Union.

 

Vivendi

Well-Known Member
Sweden, Germany and Norway has or is about to send military personnel to Greenland this week. Although all countries are NATO countries, the activities are arranged and synchronized from Copenhagen and not via NATO structures. It seems Germany will send mountain troops tomorrow (Thursday) and with the possibility of sending also air and navy forces later on. The first Swedish soldiers arrived in Greenland today, not sure when the first Norwegian soldiers will arrive, or if they already arrived. Germany sends soldiers to Greenland | Politics | BILD.de

A European diplomat said that troops from the Netherlands, Canada and France will also participate. Denmark and allies boost Greenland military footprint as Trump ramps up pressure – POLITICO

The exercise has been named " Operation Arctic Endurance".

Statements from Danish FM Rasmussen today:

Rasmussen describes today's meeting in Washington as "frank but constructive". He says the US and Denmark's positions on the future of Greenland seem to differ. The Danish foreign minister says US President Trump has made his views clear, but Denmark has a "different position". "We still have fundamental disagreement" but we will continue to talk, he says.
Danish minister says 'fundamental disagreement' remains after 'frank' Greenland talks with US - live updates - BBC News
 
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