Vances’ planned trip to Greenland is stoking Arctic anti-Americanism

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Initially billed as a cultural trip, Usha Vance had planned to visit Nuuk and attend events, such as a popular annual dog sled race on the sparsely populated island that is home to just 56,000 people. 

That changed after her husband said Tuesday that he would join her, an announcement that was met with widespread anger in both Greenland and Denmark, which controlled the island for 300 years until it became a formal territory in 1953. Although Greenland gained home rule in 1979, Copenhagen still controls its foreign and defense policy and contributes just under $1 billion to its economy.

The trip was subsequently shortened to just one day and limited to the U.S. Pituffik Space Base, hundreds of miles from Nuuk and other cities, meaning they will be well out of the way of the locals.  

Irene Thor Jeremiassen, a 35-year-old Inuit law student, said she preferred the new itinerary. “I didn’t want to meet him,” she said of JD Vance.

Irene Thor Jeremiassen, a 35-year-old Inuit law student.NBC News

Tungutaq Larsen, 67, attended a demonstration against Trump, whose plans, he said, were “not acceptable here in Greenland.”

“Why do you want to buy a human?” he added. “We are not for sale.”

He said JD Vance would be welcome if he treated Greenlanders like humans, but “if you see us like things without feelings, then you are not welcome here in Greenland.”

The anger nonetheless remains at President Donald Trump, who, since his first term, has repeatedly stated an interest in acquiring the island, two-thirds of which sits above the rapidly melting Arctic Circle, where deposits of rare-earth minerals and potential offshore oil and natural gas remain largely untapped, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Trump repeated his threat to take over Greenland, which is technically part of North America, on Wednesday. 

Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, and his wife, Usha Vance
JD Vance and his wife, Usha Vance, in Greenville, N.C., in September.Allison Joyce / Getty Images

“We need Greenland for international safety and security. We need it. We have to have it,” the president told podcaster Vince Coglianese. “I hate to put it that way, but we’re going to have to have it.”

The comments were condemned by several Danish lawmakers and Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen, who called them an escalation.

“These very powerful statements about a close ally do not suit the U.S. president,” he told reporters in Copenhagen on Thursday, according to Reuters. “I need to clearly speak out against what I see as an escalation from the American side,” he said. “The tightened rhetoric is in every way far-fetched.”

While opinion polls show that almost all Greenlanders oppose becoming part of the United States, there have been some upsides to the heightened American interest, according to Qupanuk Olsen, a member of the island’s parliament. 

Qupanuk Olsen, a member of Greenland’s parliament.
Qupanuk Olsen, a member of Greenland’s parliament.NBC News

“It has been like a huge wake-up call for everyone in Greenland,” said Olsen, whose centrist Naleraq Party has called for a referendum on independence from Denmark and favors closer ties with the United States, including a potential free association agreement.

She added that another country showing interest had made people think that they were most likely worth much more than they thought. 

However, she said some people feared Greenland would simply be colonized by another country. 

“We cannot avoid the U.S., so we need to learn to dance with the U.S.,” Olsen said. “Right now I feel like the U.S. is forcing us to dance together. ‘Come, you are going to dance with me now.’ It would be so much nicer if they said, ‘Would you like to dance?’” 

Greenland, she said, was “starting to take the first steps toward independence, so we need to figure out who we are going to dance with in the future.” 

“In my opinion, it’s now that we have to start the negotiations with other countries, not just the U.S., we should talk to Canada as well, other countries in Europe as well,” she added. 

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