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January 12, 2026

Trump Tasks Special Forces to Prepare Greenland Invasion Strategy

The CSR Journal Magazine

US President Donald Trump has reportedly ordered elite special forces commanders to draft detailed invasion plans for Greenland, the vast Arctic territory under Danish control. This directive, revealed by the UK’s Daily Mail and corroborated across international outlets, comes just days after US forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a daring operation on January 3. Trump’s hawks, led by Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, see Greenland as a strategic prize to block Russian and Chinese expansion in the melting Arctic, where rare earth minerals and uranium deposits beckon amid climate change.

Speaking bluntly at a White House event on Friday, Trump declared, “We are going to do something on Greenland, whether they like it or not, because if we don’t do it, Russia or China will take over Greenland.” He added a stark warning: “I would like to make a deal the easy way, but if we don’t do it the easy way, we will do it the hard way.” For India, watching from afar, this saga echoes colonial-era land grabs, raising questions about great-power bullying in resource-rich frontiers, much like China’s moves in the South China Sea that Delhi has long contested.

The island’s allure lies not just in its location but its untapped wealth. Greenland holds vast reserves of rare earth elements critical for smartphones, electric vehicles, and defence tech; resources India itself seeks to secure amid global supply chain battles. Melting ice is opening new shipping routes and mining opportunities, drawing rivals like Russia, which has bolstered Arctic bases, and China, eyeing infrastructure projects. Trump frames it as national security, but critics see echoes of his past purchase overtures, rejected outright by Denmark in 2019 and now revived with military menace.

Military Brass Pushes Back on Invasion Directive

Top US military leaders are mounting fierce resistance to Trump’s order, labelling it “illegal” and devoid of congressional approval. The Joint Chiefs of Staff argue that invading a NATO ally’s territory (Denmark defends Greenland) would shatter legal norms and alliance unity. Sources describe frantic Pentagon efforts to redirect the president toward alternatives, like targeting Russian “ghost ships” in the Arctic or strikes on Iran, rather than a Greenland assault.

Denmark, dwarfed militarily by the US (its forces are just 0.44% the size), has dusted off a 1952 Cold War directive: troops in Greenland are authorised to “shoot first and ask questions later” if attacked. Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen announced a $13.8 billion rearmament plan for the territory, signalling resolve despite the mismatch. The US already maintains Thule Air Base there, a Cold War relic for missile warning, underscoring that deeper access could come via diplomacy, not force.

This internal US rift highlights Trump’s post-inauguration tensions with the brass, reminiscent of his first term clashes. For observers in Mumbai or Delhi, it mirrors how superpowers like the US can pivot from ally to adversary, much as India navigates US-China frictions in the Indo-Pacific.

NATO’s Arctic Nightmare Unfolds

The Greenland standoff has plunged NATO into existential peril, with Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen thundering that a US takeover would spell “the end of NATO”. On January 6, a bloc of European heavyweights; France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, the UK, and Denmark; issued a joint rebuke: “Greenland belongs to its people,” insisting only Nuuk and Copenhagen decide its fate. Britain, bolstering Arctic patrols, fears Russian exploitation of the chaos.

Analysts warn of a “worst-case scenario” where invasion fractures the alliance from within, emboldening adversaries. Denmark hesitates to invoke Article 4 consultations, lest it provoke Trump further, but Arctic security hangs in balance as melting ice reshapes geopolitics. Trump, once a NATO critic, now risks alienating partners he softened toward post-reelection.

From an Indian lens, this exposes NATO’s power imbalances, much like Quad dynamics where the US leads but tests loyalties. As New Delhi eyes Arctic observer status, Trump’s gambit underscores the perils of over-reliance on Washington amid multipolar shifts.

Greenlanders’ Defiant Stand Shakes Superpowers

Greenland’s leaders, spanning all five political parties, delivered a resounding rejection on Friday: “We do not want to be Americans, we do not want to be Danes, we want to be Greenlanders.” Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen and peers stressed self-determination, with polls showing 85% opposing US rule. Talks continue in Washington with Danish and Greenlandic reps, but Trump’s envoy push signals no retreat.

This unity belies internal debates over independence from Denmark, funded by fishing and grants. Mining remains nascent (one operational site), hampered by harsh weather and infrastructure gaps, yet vital for green tech transitions India champions.

As the crisis simmers into January 2026, eyes turn to Congress and courts. A former US officials’ memo deems it “strategically unwise,” predicting ally ruptures. For viral global discourse, Greenland embodies small voices against giants; a narrative resonating from Kashmir to the Arctic, where resources fuel superpower dreams. Will Trump blink, or blaze a new trail? The world watches.

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