NATO launches Arctic Sentry mission to ease tension over Trump’s Greenland push
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US Marines taking part in a 2022 NATO exercise in Norway's Arctic Circle region.
PHOTO: REUTERS
- NATO launched "Arctic Sentry" on Feb 11 to strengthen its Arctic presence, coordinating allies' military efforts against increased Russian and Chinese interest due to melting ice.
- The mission stems from tensions over Trump's demand for Greenland for US security, leading to talks where he agreed NATO would secure the broader Arctic region.
- Led by Joint Force Command-Norfolk, Germany will join with Eurofighters, while the UK and Denmark also plan substantial contributions to maintain Arctic stability.
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BRUSSELS - NATO said on Feb 11 it had launched a mission to strengthen its presence in the Arctic, part of an effort to defuse severe tensions within the alliance prompted by US President Donald Trump’s push for the US to acquire Greenland.
The new mission, Arctic Sentry, will coordinate an increasing military presence of NATO allies in the region, including exercises such as Denmark’s Arctic Endurance on Greenland, the alliance’s military headquarters said in a statement.
NATO did not quantify how many troops or specify what types of military assets would be involved in the mission.
But NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said it would bring efforts by various alliance members under a single command, as Russia and China take a greater interest in the Arctic, where new sea lanes are opening up due to melting ice.
“We will not only be able to leverage what we are doing much more effectively,” he told reporters at NATO headquarters in Brussels. “We will also be able to assess which gaps there are, which we have to fill. And, of course, we will fill them.”
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte speaking at a press briefing in Brussels on Feb 11.
PHOTO: REUTERS
German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said that the German military will participate in the first stage of the mission with four Eurofighters and air-to-air refuelling capabilities.
“What will happen beyond that will be coordinated within NATO between the partners tomorrow and the day after tomorrow,” he said.
NATO began planning for the mission after Mr Trump and Mr Rutte held talks in Davos in January at the height of the Greenland crisis, sparked by Mr Trump’s insistence that the US had to own the territory, which is part of fellow NATO member Denmark.
Mr Trump said the US needed Greenland for national security reasons, citing Greenland’s strategic location for detecting long-range missile strikes on the US. He declined to rule out threatened to impose tariffs
Danish and other European leaders responded that the US already has a military base on Greenland and is able to add more under a 1951 agreement. Some European officials said they believed Mr Trump was motivated primarily by a desire to expand US territory.
In Davos, Mr Trump said he would not use force to take Greenland
‘Maintain stability’
The new mission, known as an “enhanced vigilance activity” in NATO jargon, will be led by the alliance’s Joint Force Command in Norfolk, Virginia.
“Arctic Sentry underscores the Alliance’s commitment to safeguard its members and maintain stability in one of the world’s most strategically significant and environmentally challenging areas,” US Air Force General Alexus G. Grynkewich - NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe - said in a statement.
Denmark said it expects to contribute substantially to Arctic Sentry in close coordination with Greenland and the Faroe Islands, but that the precise make‑up of its participation would need to be agreed in further planning with its allies and NATO.
Earlier, British Defence Minister John Healey said British forces will play a vital part in NATO’s Arctic Sentry mission.
The British government also said the UK-led Joint Expeditionary Force plans major military activity in the High North, with hundreds of personnel due to be deployed across Iceland, the Danish Straits and Norway in an exercise due in September.
The JEF comprises Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom. REUTERS


