By Alberto Nardelli, Alex Wickham and Michael Nienaber
Jan 11, 2026 (Bloomberg) –A group of European countries, led by the UK and Germany, is discussing plans for a military presence in Greenland to show US President Donald Trump that the continent is serious about Arctic security and to try to tamp down American threats to take over the self-ruling Danish territory.
Germany will propose setting up a joint NATO mission to protect the Arctic region, according to people familiar with the plans. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has separately urged allies to step up their security presence in the High North and recently reached out to leaders including French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz to discuss the issue.
The US raid to capture the leader of Venezuela this month, as well as heightened rhetoric from the Trump administration on possibly using military force to control Greenland, has forced European leaders to quickly cobble together a strategy. They want to show that Europe and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have the region’s security under control, as they try to undercut Trump’s argument for taking over Greenland, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul will meet with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio this week, when he’ll address the issue of Greenland and what role NATO can play in the region’s stability.
“Because security in the Arctic is becoming increasingly important, I also want to discuss on my trip how we can best bear this responsibility in NATO — in view of old and new rivalries in the region by Russia and China — together,” Wadephul said in a statement on Sunday. “We want to discuss this together in NATO.”
While Trump has long mused about making Greenland a part of the US for national security reasons, his focus on the self-governing island has intensified in recent days following the US raid to capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
That action sparked new fears among allies over Trump’s willingness to deploy the military to achieve his foreign policy goals. His fiery rhetoric over Greenland has spurred a flurry of diplomatic activity as officials try to ascertain his intentions.
Speaking about Greenland on Friday, Trump told reporters, “I would like to make a deal, you know, the easy way. But if we don’t do it the easy way, we’re going to do it the hard way.”
Germany will propose establishing a NATO mission called “Arctic Sentry” to secure the region, according to the people. The alliance’s “Baltic Sentry” mission, which was launched a year ago to shield critical infrastructure in the Baltic Sea, would serve as a blueprint.
Starmer’s view is that Britain and Europe are best served by persuading Trump of their soft and hard power utility to the US on issues from Russia’s war in Ukraine to American security closer to home, people familiar with the matter said. It contrasts with the more publicly critical stance adopted by countries like France, which this week warned that Europe was under threat from American coercion.
Starmer spoke with Trump last week and “discussed Euro-Atlantic security and agreed on the need to deter an increasingly aggressive Russia in the High North,” Downing Street said. “The NATO alliance needed to step up in the region,” Starmer told Macron and Merz.
For now, Denmark is still hoping a diplomatic trip to Washington this coming week can temper Trump. The foreign ministers of Denmark and Greenland, Lars Lokke Rasmussen and Vivian Motzfeldt, are aiming to confront what Copenhagen says are persistent factual errors and exaggerated security claims driving the debate.
While the president has said he won’t rule out military force to acquire the Arctic island, Rubio late Tuesday told lawmakers the aim is to buy Greenland rather than staging an intervention that could test the future of NATO.
“The legitimate interests of all NATO allies, but also those of the inhabitants of the region, must be at the heart of our considerations,” Wadephul said. “Of course, this also applies to Greenland and its people.”
BERLIN, Feb 3 (Reuters) – Two workers have been arrested on suspicion of sabotaging several German warships at Hamburg harbor in 2025, the prosecutor general’s office said on Tuesday. The...
A merchant tanker transiting the Strait of Hormuz was harassed by Iranian forces on Monday in an incident that now appears to involve the U.S.-flagged Stena Imperative, a strategically important vessel...
By Charlie Duxbury Feb 2, 2026 (Bloomberg) – The French navy sailed its new frigate Amiral Ronarc’h into Sweden’s Gothenburg harbor on Monday as it works to sway the Nordic...
February 2, 2026
Total Views: 1762
Get The Industry’s Go-To News
Subscribe to gCaptain Daily and stay informed with the latest global maritime and offshore news
— just like 107,541 professionals
Secure Your Spot
on the gCaptain Crew
Stay informed with the latest maritime and offshore news, delivered daily straight to your inbox
— trusted by our 107,541 members
Your Gateway to the Maritime World!
Essential news coupled with the finest maritime content sourced from across the globe.