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2026 US-Denmark Tensions/End of NATO

Would that solidarity mean that, push come to shove, Royal Anglian Regiment or 1er Régiment Étranger will be lining up for a Scarborough battle honour? No. But western solidarity with Canada if we’re next in the sights would include many other things that could cause the sort of economic pain to finally trigger a domestic political response in the U.S. Widespread sanctions, dumping of U.S. treasuries, etc. An economically lonely U.S. would very quickly realize it’s in a different sort of situation.

I think you and @Remius are spot on here. This is how we do it.
 
If Trump were inclined to act militarily against Canada, he’ll do it because he feels like it. No specific pretext would make or break it. Any solidarity we show with Greenland and NATO might be something he would act audibly mad about, but it would not fundamentally change his intent regarding Canada. Similarly, if he did not intend hostility to Canada, contributing to the defence of a NATO ally would not change that to suddenly ‘yes’.

All that being the case, if we cannot really change Trump’s intentions towards us, whatever they should be, we should show solidarity with a NATO ally and contribute to collective defence with whatever we can manage. We have the benefit of Trump’s own offered fig leaf: anything we send there, we and NATO allies do so with the public reasoning that we’re postured to defend Greenland from Russia. Just roll our eyes and play his rhetorical game. If he then goes and attacks NATO, ok, that’s gonna suck, but by that point we’re essentially pinning our hopes on Congress or senior U.S. military leadership anyway.

Would that solidarity mean that, push come to shove, Royal Anglian Regiment or 1er Régiment Étranger will be lining up for a Scarborough battle honour? No. But western solidarity with Canada if we’re next in the sights would include many other things that could cause the sort of economic pain to finally trigger a domestic political response in the U.S. Widespread sanctions, dumping of U.S. treasuries, etc. An economically lonely U.S. would very quickly realize it’s in a different sort of situation.

I don’t see a ‘gaming this out’ where failing to support Greenland’s sovereignty is advantageous to Canada. Now more than ever is a time to show up for allies.

I have proposed this previously. I think the timing could be propitious.


This particular article was originally posted by @daftandbarmy.

This Globe and Mail article concurs


That would require us to be able to operate effectively from the Aleutians to Murmansk above 70 N in all domains concurrently.
 
Canada needs to think of itself before everyone else. Is an American invasion of Greenland the hill we want to die on ? If Canada says yes, you will be joining me in the fight. I assume you are still serving.
This is the rational that led to France and the UK not intervening when Czechoslovackia was annex by Germany...

It was in "their best interests" to let a democratically elected leader threaten, then annex a soverign nation. Not too long after they learned a very costly lesson about shortsighted thinking and the consequences of not countering the bully from the start.
 
So what ? Are we going to convene vigorously ?

You say this in jest, but the more... creative.. side of my brain says that if we were dealing with a rational actor with legitimate security concerns that there might be a path to de-escalation by offramping Greenland into in a 4th Canadian terrority (if they chose it), under NORAD, with significant Canadian investment both NORAD expansion/ Golden Dome and in Nuuk as a Naval station, and some sort of agreement on how we'd handle the future use of the Northwest passage. Seriously vigorous convening.

But we're not dealing with the bold, so the above would be futile even if we could pull it off.
 
You say this in jest, but the more... creative.. side of my brain says that if we were dealing with a rational actor with legitimate security concerns that there might be a path to de-escalation by offramping Greenland into in a 4th Canadian terrority (if they chose it), under NORAD, with significant Canadian investment both NORAD expansion/ Golden Dome and in Nuuk as a Naval station, and some sort of agreement on how we'd handle the future use of the Northwest passage. Seriously vigorous convening.

But we're not dealing with the bold, so the above would be futile even if we could pull it off.
If you watch the video I posted (the last segment) the argument is what is to be gained at all from an annexion when the US gets everything it wants anyways there. There is absolutely no case for it at all. Denmark has been a loyal ally to the US forever.
 
We saw the UK and the King's true colors last year. No one is coming to help us, no one.
I'm not so sure. The King came and that visit was very well received. The King also wore the uniform of a Canadian Admiral when he toured HMS Prince of Wales last year. He also put forward an invitation to Trump for the US to join the Commonwealth in some manner. The King cannot speak directly about these things.
 
If you watch the video I posted (the last segment) the argument is what is to be gained at all from an annexion when the US gets everything it wants anyways there. There is absolutely no case for it at all. Denmark has been a loyal ally to the US forever.
I think Zeihan underplays a significant aspect re- Flag on the map with respect to the Arctic/ NWP etc. He kind of hand waved that away by referencing the allowing of passage of Chinese ships as the only benefit- but there's a lot more to it than that. Having Greenland be US fundamentally changes their position relative to us, the NWP, and UNCLOS, as it would give them Denmark's claim to the continental shelf extended EEZ. (Of course ignoring that if they took it by force they throw out all international convention.)

There's reason for the US to covet Greenland- but it's not justified by defense needs, and coveting something in no way grants you right to it.

If there were legitimate defense concerns, given the agreements they have in place they could only be financial/resources based, wanting more done but someone else to foot the bill - without ceding control.

My proposal would address the latter- but it runs in direct contraction to the former (not to mention the ego driven imperialist ambition), which is actually driving things - so it's moot.
 
I'm not so sure. The King came and that visit was very well received. The King also wore the uniform of a Canadian Admiral when he toured HMS Prince of Wales last year. He also put forward an invitation to Trump for the US to join the Commonwealth in some manner. The King cannot speak directly about these things.
Hopefully this is only a short derail.

The King wore his Royal Navy uniform during the visit in question.

Various news outlets tried to hype the fact that he wore Canadian ribbons, such as the Order of Canada, Order of Military Merit, and Canadian Forces Decoration, which he has done for decades.

Edit for spelling.
 
Reference the Zeihan interview that Remius posted

Key element for me.

Zeihan's summation, and a point made in the body of the interview. Trump is Trumpian but much of what is happening would happen in any event, Particularly the retrenchment back to the Western Hemisphere.

One of the biggest changes is the taking of the shadow fleet off the board by giving cover to seize them. In my view this is not the end of security on the high seas but the imposition of a new security regime, one that looks a lot more like the Pax Britannica.

The US hated the Pax Britannica. It prompted a revolution, allowed Americans to be pressganged at sea by the RN and inyerrupted the slave trade. That latter gave the RN moral cover for its actions but made Britain enemies with every country that had a slave economy. That meant every country. And Britain didn't by out yhose with interests in the trade the way they did with Scottish mine owners and British plantation owners. People that had invested in slaves to operate their businesses lost their investments and had to try to find other money to buy British steam engines.

But that RN presence reduced piracy all over the world and made international trade more secure, if under the control of Admiralty House.

World War 2 saw the US dismantle that system and replace it with one that turned the seas back into commons. Although it was backed by the USN it was policed by everyone. The USN was less focused on patrolling the sea lanes with frigates and sloops to maintain order than it was on power projection with big ships.

Somali pirates, Colombian drug runners and the BRICS shadow fleet are all emblematic of that break down.

The tragedy of the commons repeats itself, If everyone is in charge then no one is in charge. And the problem is not cured by more laws. The problem is only cured by action.

Trump demonstrated that he was willing to act and disregard threats and opinions. This has released others with interests and capabilities to act accordingly and start seizing these shadows in earnest.

If Zeihan is correct then that will take about 5 million barrels per day off the board, or a little bit more than the 4 million currently pimped by Alberta and less than Danielle's 8 million target.

....

Opportunity for a recapitalized fleet and a system of patrols that polices the seas actively. One of the problems, as I recall, with the Somali pirates, was what to do with them once they were captured. Rules said they were to be returned to the failed states from whence they came for non-existent courts to deal with.

....

But back to Denmark and Greenland - I don't think Greenland will be invaded. I don't think Denmark will lose its position. I do think that Trump will be accommodated.

Why is he doing this? I don't think the theatrics are aimed at Denmark. I think that he has got three years, maybe only one now, to accomplish what he wants to accomplish and, I think, from his perspective, the more people that believe he is capable of anything the easier it is for him to accomplish his goals, whatever those are.

I happen to think that by and large those goals are in sync with a large portion of not just the MAGA crowd but a good chunk of the American Establishment. There have been some squawks about tariffs and the independence of the Federal Reserve but I am not picking up much active opposition to the broad tenor of the administration. The market continues to function. Even when Trunp went after defence contractors a few days ago that had zero impact on share prices.
 
So DND is now saying that we won't be sending any troops to Greenland?


Whereas this said:


Are we still convening the meeting on this?
 
Is Canada sending anyone?
Probably still being figured out, and those who know will STFU about it.

There’s still a reasonably non-batshit off-ramp for Trump on this. He can just say a bunch of dumb noises and include that he ‘got NATO to take security interests with Greenland seriously, all he had to do was threaten to do it his way’ - and then he can change gears and chase a different squirrel. Damage is still done, but that would mitigate it and let him save face by pretending he got what he wanted.

If he continues the brinksmanship in the face of actual NATO troop deployments, that will tell us a lot.
 
So DND is now saying that we won't be sending any troops to Greenland?


Whereas this said:


Are we still convening the meeting on this?

The Star article could very well be based on out of date information.

EDIT: Or they misunderstood?

 
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