Denmarkโs Mette Frederiksen says her country remains โGreenlandโs closest partnerโ during a three-day trip to Greenland.
Denmarkโs prime minister has pledged to support Greenland against US President Donald Trumpโs expressions of interest in acquiring the Danish semi-autonomous territory as she landed in Nuuk for talks with its incoming government.
Mette Frederiksen began her three-day trip to the vast Arctic island less than a week after a visit to the territory by US Vice President JD Vance drew a frosty reception from authorities in Denmark and Greenland.
โThe US shall not take over Greenland. Greenland belongs to the Greenlanders,โ Frederiksen told reporters in the capital Nuuk on Wednesday.
The Danish leader said she wanted to support Greenland โin a very, very difficult situationโ.
Ahead of her visit, she had said she aimed to strengthen Copenhagenโs ties with the island and emphasised the importance of respectful cooperation at a time of what she described as โgreat pressure on Greenlandโ.
Greenlandโs incoming Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen, who won last monthโs parliamentary election and will form a coalition government, has welcomed Frederiksenโs trip, saying that Denmark remains โGreenlandโs closest partnerโ.
Frederiksen promised to do what she could to ensure equal rights to Greenlanders and Danes within the Danish realm.
โMost of all, we need to discuss the foreign and security policy situation, geopolitics, and how we approach this very, very difficult task together because that is what it is all about now.โ
Nielsenโs new coalition is expected to formally take office on April 7.
In addition to meeting Nielsen, Frederiksen is also expected to meet with the future Naalakkersuisut, the Cabinet, during her visit, which is expected to last through Friday.
Greenland is a mineral-rich, strategically critical island that is becoming more accessible because of climate change. Trump has said that the landmass is critical to US security.
The country offers the shortest route from North America to Europe, giving the US a strategic upper hand for its military and ballistic missile early-warning system.
โRespectfulโ relationship
Relations between Greenland and Denmark have been strained after revelations in recent years of historical mistreatment of Greenlanders under colonial rule. Trumpโs interest in controlling Greenland, part of a growing international focus on competition for influence in the Arctic, has prompted Denmark to step up efforts to improve relations with the island.
Nielsen told Reuters news agency late on Monday that Greenland would strengthen its ties with Denmark until it could fulfil its ultimate wish to become a sovereign nation.
Experts have said that the USโs interest in a takeover has actually reinforced Greenlandโs ties with Copenhagen.
Richard Powell, professor of Arctic studies at the University of Cambridge, told Al Jazeera that while independence was still a โbroadly popular long-term goalโ, Trumpโs interest in the country has โconsolidated Greenlandโs future within the Kingdom of Denmark, at least for the next couple of decadesโ.
Greenland wishes to establish a โrespectfulโ relationship with the United States, Nielsen said.
โTalking about annexation and talking about acquiring Greenland and not respecting the sovereignty is not respectful. So letโs start by being respectful to each other and build up a great partnership on everything,โ he said.
Frederiksenโs visit is primarily about signalling support at a time of intense scrutiny, said Ulrik Pram Gad, an academic at the Danish Institute for International Studies.
โIt is important for Denmark to signal to Greenland that Denmark is Greenlandโs closest friend and ally โ and to the US that it stands behind Greenland,โ he said.
During his visit to a US military base in northern Greenland last Friday, Vance accused Denmark of not doing a good job of keeping the island safe and suggested the US would better protect the strategically located territory.
Frederiksen, who has said it is up to the people of Greenland to decide their own future, called Vanceโs description of Denmark โnot fairโ.
Opinion polls show that a majority of Greenlandโs 57,000 inhabitants support independence from Denmark, but many oppose seeking independence too quickly, fearing their island could become worse off and expose itself to US interests.


