Speaking in the Armenian capital Yerevan, US Vice President JD Vance says that it is "very early in the Greenland talks". Vance says it is "just very simple, Greenland is very important to the national security of the US. I do think that some of our allies have underinvested in Arctic security."
- Adds "...if we're going to invest in Arctic security, if we're going to basically pay a lot of money and be on the hook for protecting this massive land mass, I think it's only reasonable for the United States to get some benefit out of that, and that's going to be the focus of negotiations here over the next few months."
- Vance's comments come days after initial diplomatic discussions between Greenlandic, Danish and US officials. Greenlandic Foreign Minister Vivian Motzfeldt said on 7 Feb that “We are not where we want to be yet,” adding “There is going to be a long track, so where we’re going to land at the end, it’s too early to say.” Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen echoed this, saying while talks have progressed, “We are not out of the crisis, and we do not have a solution yet”.
- The initial prospect of the US unilaterally annexing Greenland, which appeared as a potential option on the table in January, has seemingly receded. Nevertheless, the strong opposition in Nuuk, Copenhagen, and other European capitals to any formal ceding of land to the US remains a flashpoint that President Trump could re-ignite at any time.