US in talks with Denmark to establish new military bases in Greenland
Washington wants three new installations in southern Greenland to monitor Russian and Chinese maritime activity, with negotiations building on a 70-year-old defense pact.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 13, 2026The United States is actively negotiating with Denmark to open three new military bases in southern Greenland, a move aimed at countering growing Russian and Chinese presence in one of the most strategically important maritime corridors on the planet.
What’s on the table
The negotiations center on three base sites in southern Greenland, with one likely candidate being the former Narsarsuaq facility. That site was originally built as a US military base and still has existing infrastructure that could simplify reactivation.
Washington aims to designate these new bases as sovereign American territory, a significant legal distinction that would give the Pentagon full jurisdictional control over the installations.
The US and Denmark signed a defense cooperation agreement back in 1951, and Denmark has reportedly signaled openness to expanding US access under this existing framework. The White House has confirmed the talks are happening and has expressed optimism about the direction of the discussions. No final agreement is in place as of early 2026.
Why Greenland, why now
The US military footprint in Greenland has been minimal for decades. America’s primary presence on the island is Pituffik Space Base, formerly known as Thule Air Base, located in the far north. Most other US installations on Greenland were shuttered back in the 1960s, leaving a significant gap in coverage, particularly in the island’s southern reaches.
The GIUK Gap was a critical monitoring zone during the Cold War, when NATO obsessively tracked Soviet submarine movements through the corridor. The renewed focus on this waterway reflects a broader recognition that great power competition has returned to the Arctic.
President Trump previously floated the idea of acquiring the island outright. The current negotiations take a decidedly different approach, with the White House framing this as a defense partnership expansion, not a territorial acquisition play. Denmark retains sovereignty over Greenland’s foreign and defense affairs, though the island’s autonomous government has been pushing for greater self-determination.
What this means for the broader strategic picture
The sovereign territory designation the US is seeking goes beyond the typical status-of-forces agreement that governs most American overseas bases. If Washington secures this, it would represent one of the most significant expansions of sovereign US military territory in decades.
Watch for how Greenland’s autonomous government responds. Their buy-in isn’t legally required for defense decisions, but political resistance on the island could complicate implementation significantly and become a leverage point in Greenland’s ongoing push for independence from Denmark.
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