
by
Joseph Lord
Congressional reporter for The Epoch Times
May 05, 2025
from
TheEpochTimes Website

Residents take advantage
of good weather
in Nuuk, Greenland,
on May 4, 2025.
John Fredricks/The
Epoch Times
President Donald Trump
said
military action in either case
is
unlikely but said he is less certain
about
Greenland...
President
Donald Trump on May 4 ruled out using military
force to annex
Canada but said he was not ruling the possibility out
in the case of Greenland.
During an interview that aired May 4 on NBC's "Meet the Press,"
anchor Kristin Welker asked Trump whether he would rule out military
force against Canada.
Trump said:
"I think we're not going to ever get to that
point. Something could happen with Greenland. I'll be honest, we
need that for national and international security."
Welker asked,
"But not with Canada?"
Trump told her:
"It's highly unlikely. I just don't see it
with Canada, I have to be honest with you."
Trump said action against Greenland was also
unlikely but noted that he could envision circumstances in which he
would be open to it.
"I don't rule it out," he said.
"I don't say I'm going to do it, but I don't
rule out anything.
"We need Greenland very badly... for international security."
He also promised that the United States would
"cherish" the "very small amount of people" currently inhabiting the
Arctic mega-island.
"We have Russian boats and we have Chinese
boats, gun ships all over the place... going up and down the
coast of Greenland," he said.
"We need that to be protected.
Internationally, we need it."
Canada
Following his election in November 2024, Trump stirred up the
international community by expressing interest in,
-
reclaiming U.S. control over the Panama
Canal
-
obtaining control of Greenland
-
potentially absorbing Canada as the 51st
state...
After the election, in meetings with
then-Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Trump
referred to Trudeau as,
"governor... of the Great State of Canada."
During the interview, Trump maintained that he
was serious about the proposal and believed that it would be to both
countries' benefit.
Asked whether he would discuss the prospect of adding Canada to the
United States with newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Mark
Carney, Trump said:
"I'll always talk about that. If Canada was a
state it wouldn't cost us. It would be great."
Speaking about a hypothetical map after a
U.S.-Canada merger, Trump said:
"I'm a real estate guy at heart.
When I look down at that [map] without that
artificial line that was drawn with a ruler many years ago...
what a beautiful country it would be."
The United States, meanwhile, would benefit
because Canada would no longer be reliant on it for defense spending
while existing as a separate country.
"Canada [spends] less money on military than
practically any nation in the world," Trump said.
"They pay NATO less than any nation.
They think we are subsidizing, they think we
are going to protect them - and really, we are - but the truth
is, they don't carry their full share, and it's unfair to the
United States and our taxpayers."
As of 2024, Canada was one of the
eight NATO member nations that did not meet the minimum defense
expenditure of 2 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP).
With defense expenditure at 1.37 percent of
its GDP, Canada was ranked 27th out of the 32 member
nations in 2024 on defense spending.
Carney has said Canada will meet its 2
percent spending requirement by 2030.
Greenland
Much more of Trump's geopolitical attention in the Western
Hemisphere has focused on Greenland.
Trump has long had ambitions to add Greenland as a U.S. territory,
first floating the idea of purchasing it from Denmark, which
currently controls it, in 2019 during his first term.
There are several reasons for his interest in the sparsely populated
Arctic island.
U.S. control of Greenland has been a central focus of Trump's
foreign policy, which has been compared to the Monroe Doctrine in
its emphasis on increasing U.S. influence on Western Hemisphere
geopolitics.
Russia's northern coastline circles the Arctic, and the adversary
has long taken an interest in the region.
In December 2024,
an article from the Department of
Defense reported that,
Chinese interest in the region was also
increasing and that greater funding would be required to protect
U.S. interests in the Arctic...
Since October 2024, the two leading U.S. rivals have been conducting
joint patrols in the region, an escalation from the Chinese regime's
previously minimal involvement with Arctic affairs.
During a March tour of Greenland, including a visit to the U.S.
Pituffik Space Base on the northern tip of the island, U.S. Vice
President JD Vance said the administration is "really
interested in Arctic security" and predicted that the issue will
increase in relevance in the coming years.
Vance said Denmark, which currently rules Greenland, has not,
"devoted the resources necessary to keep this
base, to keep [U.S.] troops, and... to keep the people of
Greenland safe from a lot of very aggressive incursions from
Russia, from China, and other nations [in the region]."
Aside from that, Pituffik Space Base is crucial
to the United States' missile defense strategy, as the Arctic
represents the shortest distance an intercontinental ballistic
missile would need to fly to strike the U.S. mainland.
Rare earth elements, such as lithium and
titanium, are abundant on the island - including 31 critical
minerals of the roughly
50 identified by the Department of
Energy.
Several of these minerals are crucial for
manufacturing the microchips that power almost all modern
technology.
China currently dominates the international market for several of
these elements, making the United States heavily reliant on its
leading adversary in this domain.
The area also neighbors several crucial shipping and strategic
channels in the Arctic, increasing its potential value to the United
States.
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