New Delhi, January 21 — Tensions are escalating over Greenland as US President Donald Trump signals unwavering intent to secure the strategic Arctic territory. Declaring no alternatives exist, Trump’s stance has ignited global backlash, particularly from the European Union, which is vocally opposing American ambitions.
Retired Brigadier Aditya Madan, a seasoned defense analyst, dissects the fallout. In a pointed analysis, he warns that Trump’s aggressive posture could dismantle NATO from within. ‘Yesterday, eight nations—Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Britain, Netherlands, and Germany—deployed troops under the guise of an exercise,’ Madan stated. ‘This is no drill; it’s a clear message to America that any operation on Greenland won’t be straightforward.’
Delving into NATO’s fragility, Madan highlights the alliance’s 32-member structure, long anchored by US leadership. ‘America attacking a fellow NATO member like Denmark over Greenland would shatter the organization,’ he asserted. NATO nations have relied heavily on US command, control, and defense hardware. Post such a rift, Europe would face a massive overhaul: sourcing military gear elsewhere, forging new intra-alliance trades, and rebuilding shattered chains of command.
A 1951 security pact between the US and Denmark allows American troop surges in Greenland threats, but Madan dismisses immediate perils from Russia or China. ‘No formal threats from Moscow or Beijing,’ he noted. Drawing parallels to Trump’s Venezuela oil pursuits—eyeing 20% of global reserves despite refining limits—Madan sees Greenland’s rare earth minerals as the real prize. ‘Trump, the businessman, has his eyes on these resources, not geopolitical foes.’
As EU voices amplify, the world watches if Trump’s gambit fractures the West’s premier defense pact, forcing a reevaluation of transatlantic bonds in an era of resource rivalries.
