US intends to transform Greenland into northern outpost — Russian military analyst
Reports about the Greenland negotiation process suggest that Washington has got Denmark in its claws, Alexander Stepanov said
"GREENLAND" · 총 34건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 86,483건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.2(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,355건(5.0%)·중립 79,986건(92.5%)·부정 2,142건(2.5%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.8(중도 균형)입니다.
Reports about the Greenland negotiation process suggest that Washington has got Denmark in its claws, Alexander Stepanov said
The US is reported to have had 17 military facilities and more than 10,000 troops on Greenland at the height of the Cold War.
"For now."
Scientists across the country are expressing alarm as the Trump administration dismantles another tool for understanding how the planet is changing. More than 900 deep-sea ocean sensors will be pulled out of the Pacific and Atlantic oceans near Washington, Oregon, Alaska, North Carolina and Greenland. Researchers say these are critical ocean observation tools. William Brangham explains.
When asked if he is aware Greenland is a part of Denmark, the Secretary of State replied "for now".
Denmark's government has finally been unveiled after the country's general election back in March. Mette Frederiksen will return for a third term as prime minister, leading a centre-left coalition minority government. She is expected to maintain a firm stance against US President Donald Trump's ambitions for Greenland and to continue to support Ukraine. On a domestic front, she's vowed improve the cost of living.
While I traveled to Greenland, my 11-year-old unexpectedly started taking the bus and making his own lunch.
COPENHAGEN, June 2 - Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen's new centre-left government will resist U.S. pressure over the future of Greenland, tackle domestic inflation and expand the welfare state, according to a policy document published on Tuesday.
The United States and its European allies face a growing critical minerals challenge, and Greenland’s government is making it harder to address. The Kvanefjeld rare earth deposit in southern Greenland, one of the world’s largest, remains stalled because of political decisions by Greenland’s semi-autonomous government. The timing is difficult to ignore. China is tightening its […]
Denmark’s Social Democratic leader Mette Frederiksen said on Monday she has agreed to form a centre-left coalition government, maintaining her grip on power amid a crisis in ties with US President Donald Trump over the future of Greenland. The deal to form a minority cabinet gives Frederiksen a third consecutive term as prime minister, ending months of uncertainty after a March election in which 12 parties won seats in the Danish parliament. “I have been to see His Majesty the King and...
Denmark's Social Democratic leader Mette Frederiksen said she has agreed to form a centre-left coalition government, maintaining her grip on power amid a crisis in ties with US President Donald Trump over the future of Greenland.
End of election deadlock will see PM Frederiksen continue her stewardship of response to Trump's Greenland lust.
Social Democratic leader secures third consecutive term as prime minister amid crisis in ties with Donald Trump over Greenland Denmark’s Social Democratic leader Mette Frederiksen said on Monday she has agreed to form a centre-left coalition government, maintaining her grip on power amid a crisis in ties with Donald Trump over Greenland. The deal to form a minority cabinet gives Frederiksen a third consecutive term as prime minister, ending months of uncertainty after a March election in which 12 parties won seats in the Danish parliament. Continue reading...
COPENHAGEN, June 1 - Denmark's Social Democratic leader Mette Frederiksen said on Monday she has agreed to form a centre-left coalition government, maintaining her grip on power amid a crisis in ties with U.S. President Donald Trump over the future of Greenland.
COPENHAGEN, June 1 — Piano notes tinkle in the background and the aroma of brown butter wafts through t...
At a very special library in Copenhagen, Denmark, the "books" being checked out are actual human beings. The Human Library, founded 26 years ago, offers 30-minute conversations with living books on a wealth of subjects, and is now available in 80 countries (including the United States) and online. CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook talked with the library's co-founder Ronni Abergel, and checked out three unique books on the topics of schizophrenia, refugees, and Greenland.
Voters were quizzed on Venezuela, Greenland and Cuba, the three countries Trump has floated annexing to the United States.
Clifford E. Stanley, a retired broker, explains his unusual mission, which caught a lot of people by surprise.
As Washington races to build a rare earth supply chain that can survive the Pentagon’s 2027 ban on Chinese-origin materials, REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY) has locked in long-term supply from one of the largest known heavy rare earth deposits in the world. The company announced last Thursday that it has signed a definitive 15-year offtake agreement with Critical Metals Corp. (NASDAQ: CRML) covering 15% of Phase 1 production from the Tanbreez project in southern Greenland, a massive heavy rare earth deposit containing Dysprosium and Terbium, the…
BERLIN: The US intends to significantly reduce military contributions available to assist European allies in a crisis, including fighter jets, warships and mid-air refuelling aircraft, German news outlet Spiegel reported on Tuesday. The Nato alliance is under unprecedented strain, with some European countries concerned that Washington may withdraw outright. US President Donald Trump has slammed European allies for not spending enough on their militaries and pledged to withdraw thousands of troops from Germany. His ambition to take control of Greenland, a Danish overseas territory, has further inflamed transatlantic tensions. Trump also fiercely criticised European allies for a lack of support in reopening the Strait of Hormuz for shipping amid the war on Iran, saying he was considering withdrawing from the Nato alliance and questioning whether Washington was bound to honour its mutual defence pact. Alliance to beef up forces assigned to defend Baltics in war According to the Spiegel report, an envoy of US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth briefed senior officials from member states on the plan at Nato headquarters in Brussels late last week. Three sources familiar with the matter said the Trump administration was planning to tell Nato allies last week it would shrink the pool of military capabilities available to the alliance during a crisis. The US aims to provide only half the previous number of strategic bombers, the reports said. Specifically, the number of US fighter jets is set to fall by a third, Spiegel cited US envoy Alexander Velez-Green as saying during the closed-door meeting. The US Navy is also set to make fewer destroyers available to Nato, and the US no longer intends to provide any submarines to the alliance. Under the changes, Europe would be forced to provide its own reconnaissance drones, while the U.S. plans to significantly scale back the provision of armed models. The US will provide further details at a force generation conference in early June, the Spiegel report said. A spokeswoman for Nato told Spiegel that there had been an “over-reliance” on the US in Nato force planning and that, with Europe and Canada investing more in defence, military responsibilities within the alliance could be reorganised. Eastern flank security Nato will strengthen the defence of its eastern flank with a new structure that would facilitate the rapid deployment of forces in Latvia and Estonia in the event of a war with Russia, two sources familiar with the matter said. At present, Nato forces in all three Baltic nations as well as northern Poland come under the command of a single multinational headquarters in the Polish city of Szczecin. The planned change underlines the strategic importance of the Baltics, which have been in focus since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Assigning a second corps for the region will allow Nato to bring in “mass at speed”, as one military official described it, addressing the region’s limited strategic depth and vulnerability. When fully operational, an army corps typically commands three divisions, or 40,000 to 60,000 troops. In peacetime, it normally exists as a skeleton command structure, with specialist functions such as artillery, air defence and medics in place to allow rapid deployment of troops when needed. Published in Dawn, May 27th, 2026