Denmark Surrendered Greenland Once; It Should Do It Again
amuse – Greenland did not drift into American stewardship by accident. It arrived there because Denmark dropped it. That fact is routinely obscured by euphemism and sentiment, but it is the hinge on which the entire moral and legal argument turns.
In April 1940, Denmark was occupied by Nazi Germany. Copenhagen fell in hours. Its government capitulated and chose accommodation over resistance.
Danish state institutions continued to function under German supervision, cooperating administratively and economically with the occupying power. Its armed forces stood down. And its far-flung colony in the Arctic was abruptly severed from the metropole. No money. No ships. No defense. No instructions. Denmark did not merely lose control of Greenland. It relinquished it, while collaborating under and alongside a hostile regime, in every way that matters.
This is not a rhetorical flourish. Sovereignty is not a feeling. It is a bundle of responsibilities. Defense, finance, and foreign relations are the core of that bundle. When a state permanently abandons those functions over a territory, sovereignty becomes an empty word.
In 1940, Denmark did exactly that. It could not defend Greenland. It could not finance Greenland. It could not communicate with Greenland in any reliable way. And worse, it had placed itself under the effective control of a hostile power.
Greenland, however, did not follow Denmark down that path. Unlike Copenhagen, Greenland refused to recognize Nazi authority. Its local officials rejected German claims and treated Denmark’s capitulation as legally and morally irrelevant to the island’s future.
Faced with isolation and an existential threat, Greenland’s leaders chose alignment with the only power capable of protecting them. In April 1941, months before Pearl Harbor and before the U.S. formally entered the war, Greenland signed an agreement with the United States placing its defense under American protection. This was one of America’s first forward defense commitments of WWII.
From the perspective of international law and plain moral reasoning, this distinction matters. Denmark acquiesced to occupation and collaboration. Greenland resisted, asserted its own agency, and invited American protection to prevent German use or seizure of the territory. In doing so, Greenland effectively repudiated Danish authority and transferred its security allegiance westward. The U.S. did not impose itself. It was asked. And it answered.
Franklin Roosevelt understood this with characteristic clarity. He did not need to invent a doctrine. He applied an old one. When a territory becomes strategically vital, and its nominal sovereign is incapacitated or compromised, responsibility shifts to the power capable of acting. Greenland sits astride the North Atlantic. It is the gateway between North America and Europe. In 1940, that gateway could not be allowed to fall into German hands. The U.S. did not wait for catastrophe. It acted.
American forces entered Greenland not as conquerors but as protectors. The 1941 agreement with Greenland was not a courtesy. It was a necessity. The Danish government in Copenhagen was not free. The minister acted independently because someone had to.
The U.S. assumed responsibility for Greenland’s defense, construction, supply, and economy. Airfields were built. Weather stations were established. Harbors were improved. Communications were modernized. The U.S. also invested heavily in securing and operating the cryolite mine at Ivittuut, a resource indispensable to wartime aluminum production and therefore to aircraft manufacturing.
That single mine supplied material critical to Allied air power at a moment when supply chains were fragile and contested. All of it was paid for by American taxpayers. Denmark contributed nothing.
This is the decisive point that modern critics evade. Stewardship creates claims. Investment creates equities. If you abandon a property and another party secures it, improves it, and maintains it at great cost, you do not automatically regain moral ownership when circumstances change. That principle holds in private law, and it holds in international affairs. Denmark walked away from Greenland when it mattered most. The U.S. stepped in. That act changed the relationship permanently.
Some will object that Denmark did not choose occupation, and therefore cannot be blamed for the consequences. That claim obscures a crucial fact. Denmark did not merely endure occupation. It chose collaboration as a governing strategy.
Danish authorities accommodated German demands, maintained administrative cooperation, and continued state functions under Nazi oversight. Sovereignty is about capacity and choice, not intent alone. A government that chooses accommodation with an occupying enemy abdicates responsibility just as surely as one that collapses outright. Greenland’s safety did not improve because Danish officials wished it well from under German supervision. It improved because American ships sailed, American engineers built, and American soldiers stood watch. Those are the facts that ground claims.
From that moment forward, Greenland’s trajectory shifted west. Its infrastructure, economy, and security became American-anchored. The Thule air base is not an aberration. It is the natural continuation of a wartime reality. Greenland became indispensable to American defense, and America became indispensable to Greenland’s survival. That relationship did not end in 1945. It deepened during the Cold War. Early warning systems, radar networks, and Arctic logistics all flowed from the original assumption of responsibility during WWII.
Denmark returned after the war to find a territory transformed and a strategic reality it no longer controlled. Yet it reasserted formal sovereignty largely by inertia and sentiment. There was no serious reckoning with the fact that Greenland had been financially and militarily sustained by the U.S. for years. There was no compensation. There was no transfer of obligations. There was simply a quiet resumption of nominal authority over a territory whose fate Denmark could not guarantee on its own.
This is why the modern Greenland question cannot be answered by appeals to tradition alone. Greenland is not culturally European in the way Denmark is. Its Inuit population is Arctic and North American in orientation. Its geography places it closer to Canada and the U.S. than to Copenhagen. Its economy is small and dependent, with roughly $600M a year in Danish subsidies propping up a $3B GDP. That arrangement is not partnership. It is stasis.
The U.S. offers something fundamentally different. Not charity, but development. Not symbolic sovereignty, but real security. Greenland’s mineral wealth, particularly its rare earth deposits, represents an opportunity that Denmark has neither the capital nor the strategic framework to realize. The U.S. does.
Those resources matter not just for commerce but for national security. Supply chains for advanced technology and defense systems cannot remain hostage to China. Greenland is one of the few places on earth that can change that equation.
Critics recoil at the idea of American territorial expansion as if history ended in 1945. It did not. Territories exist because governance capacity exists. Greenland already functions as a quasi protectorate. Its defense is American. Its strategic planning is American. Its economic ceiling is imposed by its relationship with Denmark and the EU, a bloc it deliberately exited in 1985 because European fisheries policy threatened its core industry. Greenland does not want deeper European integration. It wants room to breathe.
President Trump’s renewed focus on Greenland is therefore not eccentric. It is overdue. In his second term, Trump has correctly framed Greenland as a security necessity. The Arctic is no longer a frozen backwater. Melting ice is opening shipping lanes that will reshape global trade. Russia and China understand this. The U.S. must as well. Owning Greenland, or at minimum becoming its formal benefactor and sovereign partner, would secure America’s northern flank for generations.
What would this look like in practice? First, the current legal reality must be stated plainly. Greenland already possesses the internationally recognized right of self-determination.
Under the 2009 Self Rule Act, approved by referendum, sovereignty ultimately resides with the Greenlandic people. They may at any time vote to leave the Kingdom of Denmark entirely and declare independence as a matter of law, not rebellion. Denmark has pre-committed to respect that outcome. This is not hypothetical authority. It is codified, acknowledged, and binding.
Greenland has exercised this autonomy before. In 1985, it withdrew from the European Economic Community by popular vote, rejecting supranational European rule even as Denmark remained inside. That decision is the direct reason Greenland today is not part of the EU, despite Denmark’s membership.
The immediate catalyst was fisheries policy, but the principle was broader. Greenland refused governance by distant institutions that neither understood nor prioritized its core interests. That withdrawal remains one of the clearest demonstrations of Greenland’s willingness to chart its own course, even when it diverges sharply from Copenhagen.
A referendum on independence from Denmark is therefore the logical next step. Polling already suggests strong support for sovereignty. Independence would force the decisive question.
Who can guarantee Greenland’s future security, development, and global standing? Denmark cannot. The U.S. can. Second, the U.S. should be willing to compensate Denmark for the formal transfer, not as an admission of obligation, but as a pragmatic settlement that clears residual claims, much like the Alaska purchase. Third, Congress must be prepared to extend territorial status with full respect for Greenlandic culture, language, and local governance, much as it has done with other territories.
This would not be colonialism. It would be continuity. The U.S. has already acted as Greenland’s guarantor at the moment of greatest peril. It has already borne the costs. It has already integrated the island into its defense architecture. Formalizing that reality would simply align law with fact.
The deeper truth is this. Denmark’s claim to Greenland rests on history. America’s claim rests on responsibility. History without responsibility is nostalgia. Responsibility without recognition is unsustainable. Greenland’s future lies with the nation that proved willing to defend it when Denmark could not.
The argument is not that Greenland is for sale. It is that Greenland was already saved, already sustained, and already aligned. Returning it to Danish control after WWII may have been polite, but it was not required. And in light of today’s strategic realities, it no longer makes sense. America did not seize Greenland. It inherited it through action. The moral ledger is clear.
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SF Source American Liberty Dec 2025