US Steps Up Greenland Surveillance

Wall Street Journal:

The U.S. is stepping up its intelligence-gathering efforts regarding Greenland, drawing America’s spying apparatus into President Trump’s campaign to take over the island, according to two people familiar with the effort.

Several high-ranking officials under Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbardissued a “collection emphasis message” to intelligence-agency heads last week. They were directed to learn more about Greenland’s independence movement and attitudes on American resource extraction on the island. 

The classified message asked agencies, whose tools include surveillance satellites, communications intercepts and spies on the ground, to identify people in Greenland and Denmark who support U.S. objectives for the island.  

The directive is one of the first concrete steps Trump’s administration has taken toward fulfilling the president’s often-stated desire to acquire Greenland.

A collection-emphasis message helps set intelligence-agency priorities, directing resources and attention to high-interest targets. The Greenland order, which went to agencies including the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency, underscores the administration’s apparent commitment to seeking control of the self-governing island. It forms part of the Kingdom of Denmark, a North Atlantic Treaty Organization member and a decades long ally.

James Hewitt, a National Security Council spokesman, said the White House doesn’t comment on intelligence matters, but added: “The president has been very clear that the U.S. is concerned about the security of Greenland and the Arctic.”

In a statement, Gabbard said: “The Wall Street Journal should be ashamed of aiding deep state actors who seek to undermine the President by politicizing and leaking classified information. They are breaking the law and undermining our nation’s security and democracy.”

The Danish Embassy in Washington declined to comment, and the prime minister of Greenland didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Arctic island of some 56,000 people hasn’t historically been a key target for U.S. intelligence collection, according to a former American intelligence official and a former senior intelligence officer focused on Europe.

“Intelligence collection resources are inherently limited,” the former intelligence official said, meaning they have typically been pointed toward “perceived threats, not allied countries.” 

Since his first term, Trump has emphasized his determination to purchase, annex or conquer Greenland’s 836,000 square miles of territory—to the consternation of Denmark and many Greenlanders.

“We need Greenland for national security and even international security, and we’re working with everybody involved to try and get it,” Trump said in a joint address to Congress in March. “One way or the other, we’re going to get it.”

2 thoughts on “US Steps Up Greenland Surveillance”


  1. The US has long had a deep-cover spy in Greenland: none other than Jason Box! He has secretly been encoding his political findings in glacial retreat data and measures of moulin inflows. He’s crafty, I tell you.

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