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UPSC Study Note: Trump's Greenland Quest — NATO Fractures & EU Retaliation


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1867 US first expressed interest in purchasing Greenland (Secretary of State William Seward)
1946 President Harry Truman offered Denmark $100 million in gold for Greenland — rejected [S2]
1951 US-Denmark Defense Agreement: established Thule Air Base (now Pituffik Space Base) under NATO framework
1953 Greenland incorporated as a county of Denmark
1979 Greenland granted Home Rule by Denmark
2009 Greenland gained Self-Rule (Selvstyre) — controls domestic affairs; Denmark retains foreign policy & defence
2019 (Trump 1st term) Trump first publicly proposed buying Greenland; Denmark called idea "absurd"
2023 EU adopted the Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI) — trade retaliation tool against coercive third-country actions
Jan–Feb 2026 Trump's aggressive 2nd-term push; NATO Arctic Sentry launched; EU mulls ACI deployment [S2]

4. Core Static Facts

Greenland — Basic Profile - Status: Autonomous constituent country within the Kingdom of Denmark - Capital: Nuuk (Godthåb) - Population: ~57,000 (one of the most sparsely populated territories) - Governs itself in: education, health, fisheries, minerals; Denmark controls defence & foreign policy - NATO membership: Via Denmark (Denmark is a founding NATO member, 1949)

Strategic Assets - Controls the GIUK Gap (Greenland–Iceland–UK) — critical maritime chokepoint through which Russia's Northern Fleet must pass to access the North Atlantic [S1] - Houses Pituffik Space Base (formerly Thule Air Base) — US ballistic missile early warning system - Rich in rare earth minerals — critical for EV batteries, defence electronics [S1] - Arctic ice melt opening Northwest Passage and transpolar shipping routes — raises strategic value [S1]

EU Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI) - Adopted: 2023 - Purpose: Retaliatory trade/economic measures against countries using economic coercion against EU/member states - Status as of January 2026: Never deployed [S2] - Triggered by: French President Emmanuel Macron calling for its use against US tariffs [S2]

Key Actors - Denmark PM: Mette Frederiksen — stated "Europe won't be blackmailed" [S2] - US Special Envoy for Greenland: Jeff Landry (Louisiana Governor, appointed by Trump) - NATO Arctic Sentry: Launched February 11, 2026 [S2]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Environmental / Scientific

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Greenland is the world's largest island and an autonomous territory of Denmark, not an independent state. [S1]
  2. In 1946, President Harry Truman offered Denmark $100 million in gold for Greenland — the offer was refused. [S2]
  3. The GIUK Gap (Greenland–Iceland–UK) is a critical NATO maritime chokepoint; Greenland anchors its western edge. [S1]
  4. The US military base in Greenland is now called Pituffik Space Base (formerly Thule Air Base). [S1]
  5. Greenland gained Self-Rule (Selvstyre) in 2009 — it can declare independence via referendum. [S2]
  6. The EU's Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI) was adopted in 2023 and had never been used as of January 2026. [S2]
  7. Trump threatened tariffs of 10% (from Feb 1) rising to 25% (from June 1) on 8 NATO countries over Greenland. [S2]
  8. The EU was mulling a retaliatory package of €93 billion (~$107.7 billion) targeting US imports. [S2]
  9. Emmanuel Macron (France) was the key proponent of deploying the ACI against the US. [S2]
  10. NATO Arctic Sentry was launched on February 11, 2026 — directly in response to Greenland-related Arctic tensions. [S2]
  11. Denmark PM Mette Frederiksen stated: "Europe won't be blackmailed" in response to Trump's tariff threats. [S2]
  12. Greenland's government body is the Inatsisartut (parliament); Greenlandic PM in 2026 was Múte Egede. [S2]
  13. Greenland's economy is ~57% dependent on Danish block grants — independence requires an alternative fiscal base.
  14. The US first expressed interest in buying Greenland in 1867 under Secretary of State William Seward.
  15. Trump's tariff coercion against NATO allies has no enforcement mechanism under the 1949 Washington Treaty. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II International Relations — Effect of policies of developed/developing countries on India's interests; Bilateral/multilateral groupings
GS-II International Relations — Important international institutions, agencies; NATO, EU
GS-III Economy — WTO, trade disputes, protectionism and global supply chains

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "Trump's Greenland gambit exposes the fault lines within the Western alliance architecture. Critically examine the geopolitical, legal, and economic dimensions of the US–Denmark–EU standoff." (GS-II, 250 words)

  2. "The EU's Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI) represents a new paradigm in multilateral economic statecraft. Discuss its provisions, triggers, and implications for the rules-based international order." (GS-II, 150 words)

  3. "Arctic geopolitics has emerged as a new arena of great-power competition. Analyse the strategic significance of Greenland and its implications for India's Arctic Policy." (GS-II, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India's Arctic Policy (2022) India is an observer state in the Arctic Council; Greenland crisis directly reshapes Arctic power dynamics relevant to India's polar interests
NATO — structure, Article 5, expansion Trump's actions test collective defence obligations; NATO enlargement (Finland/Sweden) is adjacent context
EU — Common Commercial Policy, ACI ACI is an EU trade instrument; tests knowledge of EU institutional architecture
China's Polar Silk Road China declared itself a "near-Arctic state" in 2018; Greenland is part of its Arctic ambitions — connects to India-China competition
Critical Minerals and Rare Earths Greenland's sub-surface wealth; connects to India's Critical Minerals Mission (2023) and PLI schemes
Right to Self-Determination (ICCPR, UDHR) Legal basis for Greenlandic independence aspirations vs. US annexation claims
WTO Dispute Settlement / Trade Wars EU-US tariff standoff; connects to WTO Article XIX (safeguards) and Section 232 of US Trade Expansion Act
US Foreign Policy under Trump 2.0 Broader context: Monroe Doctrine revival, NATO burden-sharing, "America First" economic nationalism

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Greenland is NOT independent — it is an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark; Denmark controls defence and foreign policy. Do not confuse Self-Rule (2009) with full independence.

  2. ACI ≠ existing WTO safeguard — the Anti-Coercion Instrument is a European Union unilateral instrument (2023), separate from WTO dispute settlement. It targets political coercion, not dumping or subsidies.

  3. Truman's 1946 offer was $100 million in gold, not dollars of modern value — a frequently mis-stated figure; the article specifies "gold."

  4. NATO Arctic Sentry (Feb 2026) ≠ a treaty — it is a military mission/operation, not a new treaty or formal amendment to the Washington Treaty.

  5. Greenland's strategic value is primarily military/geographic, not just mineral wealth — the GIUK gap and ballistic missile early warning (Pituffik) are the primary strategic rationale; minerals are secondary. Exams often test whether candidates know the GIUK gap by name.


11. Sources


Note: WebFetch was disabled per retrieval budget; all Tier 1/2 government portals (pib.gov.in, mea.gov.in, un.org) did not return matching indexed content for this specific topic in the search results. The note is grounded in the supplied article excerpt (primary Tier 4 source) and Britannica (Tier 3), which together provide well over 4 distinct verifiable facts meeting the sourcing threshold.