“We Are Not Sale” Greenland Tells Trump
Greenland
has said it is "not for sale" after President Donald Trump stated
that he would like the US to buy the world's biggest island.
The
president is said to have discussed the idea of purchasing Greenland, an
autonomous Danish territory, during dinners and meetings with advisers.
But
Greenland's government dismissed the idea, saying: "We're open for
business, not for sale."
Mr Trump's
plans have also been quickly dismissed by politicians in Denmark. "It
must be an April Fool's Day joke...but totally out of [season]!", tweeted
former Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen.
The Wall
Street Journal (WSJ), which first reported the news, said Mr Trump had
spoken about the purchase with "varying degrees of seriousness".
Sources
quoted in other media differed over whether the president was joking or
seriously hoping to expand US territory.
Officials in
Greenland have insisted that the island is not on the market.
"Greenland
is rich in valuable resources such as minerals, the purest water and ice, fish
stocks, seafood, renewable energy and is a new frontier for adventure tourism.
We're open for business, not for sale," the foreign ministry said in a
statement shared on social media.
Greenland
Premier Kim Kielsen repeated the comments in a separate statement.
"Greenland
is not for sale, but Greenland is open for trade and cooperation with other
countries, including the USA," he said.
Greenland MP
Aaja Chemnitz Larsen was also among those to dismiss the president's
interest.
"No
thanks to Trump buying Greenland!", she wrote on Twitter, adding that a
"better and more equal partnership with Denmark" was the way forward.
Poul Krarup,
editor-in-chief of Greenland's Sermitsiaq newspaper, told the BBC he
"couldn't believe" Mr Trump's remarks.
"Greenland
is an independent area in the Danish kingdom and must be respected as
such," he said.
But he said
he thought the chances of Mr Trump's reported ambitions being realised were unlikely.
"We'd
like to cooperate with the US, no doubt about that, but we are independent and
we decide who our friends are."
Politicians
in Denmark have ridiculed the idea of a possible US acquisition.
"If he
is truly contemplating this, then this is final proof, that he has gone
mad," foreign affairs spokesman for the populist Danish People's Party,
Soren Espersen, told national broadcaster DR.
"The
thought of Denmark selling 50,000 citizens to the United States is completely
ridiculous."
"Out of
all things that are not going to happen, this is the most unlikely. Forget
it," Danish Conservative MP Rasmus Jarlov wrote on Twitter.
Denmark's
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, who took office earlier this year, has not
commented on the reports.
She is set
to visit Greenland this weekend and has said she is "very much looking
forward" to it.
Mr Trump is
scheduled to visit Denmark in September but there is no indication that the
possible acquisition of Greenland is on the agenda.
The WSJ
reported that it was "unclear" how the US would go about acquiring
Greenland if Mr Trump was serious.
Greenland is
the largest island in the world (after Australia, which is defined as a
continent in its own right). It is an autonomous Danish territory, located
between the North Atlantic and Arctic oceans.
It has a
population of about 56,000 people concentrated around the coastline. Almost 90%
are indigenous Greenlandic Inuit people. It has a limited self-government and
its own parliament.
More than
80% of the island is covered by an ice cap. Global warming is feared to be
causing the ice cover to melt increasingly quickly but has also increased
access to its mineral resources.
Mr Trump has
reportedly taken an interest in Greenland, in part, because of its natural
resources, such as coal, zinc, copper and iron ore.
But while
Greenland might be rich in minerals, it currently relies on Denmark for two
thirds of its budget revenue. It has high rates of suicide, alcoholism and
unemployment.
Two people
briefed on the discussions told the New York Times the president was also
interested in Greenland's "national security value" because of
its location.
The US has
long seen the island as being strategically important and established an air
force and radar base there at the start of the Cold War.
Republican
Representative Mike Gallagher described Mr Trump's idea as a "smart
geopolitical move".
"The
United States has a compelling strategic interest in Greenland, and this should
absolutely be on the table," he tweeted.
Historically,
countries have acquired territory not only through military conquest but also
financial deals.
Under the
1803 Louisiana Purchase, the US acquired about 827,000 sq miles (2.1m sq km) of
land from France for $15m (£12.3m). In 1867, the US reached a deal with Russia
to purchase Alaska for $7.2m.
The US later
purchased the Danish West Indies in 1917 and renamed them the US Virgin
Islands.
However, law
professor Joseph Blocher wrote in 2012 that the "market for sovereign
territory seems to have dried up".
"To be
sure, there is still an active market for proprietary interests in public
land... But borders - sovereign territory, rather than property - do not seem
to be for sale."
"Sovereign
territory was bought and sold throughout much of American history... But no
such market currently exists," he wrote in his paper Selling State
Borders.
The idea of
purchasing Greenland was first mooted during the 1860s under the presidency of
Andrew Johnson.
In
1867, a report by the US State Department suggested that Greenland's
strategic location, along with its abundance of resources, made it an ideal
acquisition.
But no
official move was made until 1946, when Harry Truman offered Denmark $100m for
the territory.
He had
earlier toyed with the idea of swapping land in Alaska for strategic parts of Greenland,
according to AP.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-
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