In a series of recent statements, Donald Trump has declared that Greenland must become American – and that he does not rule out using either economic or military pressure to take control of the world’s largest island.
These imperial ambitions have come under heavy criticism, and now even voices within his own party are arguing that Trump’s moves are downright “embarrassing and harmful“.
Don Bacon, a Republican congressman from Illinois, was one of the few Republican voices opposing Trump’s trade tariffs, and he is also highly critical of how Trump is treating his allies Denmark and Greenland.
– Nobody in their right mind thinks we’re going to invade Greenland or make Canada our 51st state. But that’s what he’s saying and I think it’s devastating. It’s embarrassing”, he says in an interview with Danish newspaper Berlinske.
– I don’t know what’s going on in his mind, but I know that he loves the fuss this is creating in the media, Bacon continues, and says that many Republicans share his criticism, but that few dare to express it publicly.
May attract with money
Greenland is currently an autonomous part of Denmark, with extensive self-government, and as recently as January, an opinion poll showed that 85% of Greenlanders opposed becoming part of the United States.
According to Trump himself and sources close to the White House, however, the president remains determined to take over Greenland one way or another – and one possible option is to simply lure the Greenlanders with large sums of money and other benefits if they reject Denmark and accept American sovereignty instead.
Greenland is very sparsely populated, with only 57,000 inhabitants – which means that it would be perfectly possible for the Americans to offer the population very generous grants without putting a significant burden on the US treasury.
The Nordic Times has previously noted how Greenland was discovered by Norwegians more than 1,000 years ago and how Greenland has been Danish for longer than the United States has existed as a state.