Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump isn’t crazy to want to buy Greenland

The island is not for sale, but a market for sovereign territorie­s isn’t such an outlandish idea

- Leonid Bershidsky is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

Former Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen called President Donald Trump’s reported idea of buying Greenland, a self- governed Danish territory, an out- of- season April Fool’s joke. Mr. Trump’s idea may be outlandish ( and impossible) but that doesn’t mean there’s no benefit in thinking about reviving the market in sovereign territorie­s, which once made America great.

Besides acquiring Louisiana from France, Florida from Spain, Alaska from Russia and much of its southwest from Mexico, the U. S. nearly bought Greenland and Iceland in the 1860s. The idea was to surround Canada with U. S. territory and thus persuade it to join the U. S.

The time for wooing Canada passed quickly, though, and the U. S. recognized Denmark’s sovereignt­y over Greenland in 1917 after it bought the Virgin Islands, then a Danish colony. But soon enough, the world’s biggest island acquired strategic importance for the U. S. again, this time as a base for warplanes during World War II. The atomic bomb made Greenland even more strategic. In the pre- missile years, it was especially important to have a base for bombers near an adversary’s borders, and Greenland was close enough to the Soviet Union that the U. S. could threaten all of European Russia from it. It was also an ideal base for reconnaiss­ance flights.

The U. S. tried to buy Greenland again, but a 1946 offer to the Danish government fell on deaf ears, even though the island housed only about 600 Danes at the time. As it turned out, the U. S. didn’t need to buy the island. The formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, of which Denmark was a founding member, and a 1951 bilateral defense agreement allowed the U. S. to establish the military presence it needed in Greenland.

But Greenland’s strategic significan­ce is on the rise again. Russia’s recent build- up in the Arctic, both military and civilian, is leaving the U. S. behind; a stronger U. S. presence in the region than just an Air Force base in Greenland would make it harder for Russia to seal control of the Northern Sea Route and team up with China on monopolizi­ng it. Besides, global warming and Greenland’s rapidly melting ice make for easier access to Greenland’s vast natural resources.

The U. S., in short, has better reasons to covet Greenland than Mr. Trump’s vanity or all the golf courses he could build there as the ice melts.

If the idea of the U. S. buying

Greenland still seems outlandish, it’s just because land deals between states have become rare. The most recent examples are obscure. The tiny nation of Kiribati, threatened by rising ocean levels, bought 5,500 acres of land in Fiji for $ 9 million in 2014, hoping its 100,000 residents can move there if their native atolls become uninhabita­ble. Another nation, Tuvalu, has been considerin­g similar plans. There is no transfer of sovereignt­y involved, though. If the people of Kiribati and Tuvalu have to move, they will no longer have a state of their own. They’ll be residents of Fiji.

But one could easily imagine other situations in which an institutio­nalized market in sovereign territorie­s could be beneficial. In a 2017 paper, two Duke University law professors, Joseph Blocher and Mitu Gulati, discussed what it would take to create such a market and what problems it would solve. They argued that nothing in today’s internatio­nal law prevents nations from ceding and acquiring territory as they see fit as long as the transfer isn’t forced.

The reason such deals no longer take place is that in the modern world, sovereignt­y ultimately resides with the people. Buying and selling people with the territorie­s they inhabit is an obsolete notion. But, Messrs. Blocher and Gulati argued, taking the population’s desires into considerat­ion could change things.

Their proposal is to change internatio­nal law so that “parent nations” can’t forbid a region to secede, but they’re entitled to compensati­on for lost territory. Of course, there would be lots of sensible objections to such a plan. The supply of territorie­s for sale is limited, the will of the people isn’t always easy to determine with certainty, and there’s a question of how you put a price on a place. Ukraine, for example, would be unwilling to give up Crimea to Russia for any price, and it wouldn’t be easy to organize a valid citizens’ vote there, as the 2014 “referendum” held by Russia showed.

Also, it may not be a great idea to let rich nations buy up territorie­s from poor ones and turn them into colonies. The solution Messrs. Blocher and Gulati suggested, giving the purchased territorie­s’ residents the purchasing nations’ citizenshi­p, wouldn’t change much: Puerto Ricans, for example, are U. S. citizens but they don’t really enjoy U. S. living standards.

Greenland, of course, won’t be sold to the U. S. On the one hand, Denmark has no reason to sell it. It’s a wealthy country that runs a budget surplus. It can easily afford the annual subsidy of about $ 500 million that it pays to Greenland, and it sees itself as the island’s sensible steward rather than the unwilling owner of a vast, largely uninhabite­d territory.

Besides, the 56,000 Greenlande­rs likely wouldn’t want to switch their allegiance to the U. S. The island’s Home Rule Act, approved by the Danish parliament, gives its autonomous government “fundamenta­l rights in respect of Greenland’s natural resources.” Many locals hope control over these resources eventually will form the basis of Greenland’s independen­ce, and they have no problem waiting for that opportunit­y under Denmark’s benevolent rule.

They would be unlikely to give up their current security and the prospect of independen­ce in exchange for U. S. passports. Alaska, with its recent crippling budget cuts, can hardly serve as an attractive example to another sparsely populated northern territory cut off from the continenta­l U. S.

To protect U. S. interests in the Arctic, Mr. Trump would be better off working closely and constructi­vely with European allies, including Denmark and Norway. Such cooperatio­n can make more economic sense than territoria­l expansion. Mr. Trump may be wrong on Greenland but he unwittingl­y raised the question of sovereign territory transactio­ns. If they can be used to avoid violence and unnecessar­y tension and benefit denizens of the territory for sale, why not?

If the idea of the U. S. buying Greenland still seems outlandish, it’s just because land deals between states have become rare.

 ?? Jonathan Nackstrand/ AFP/ Getty Images ?? Greenland is not for sale, the mineral- rich island said Aug. 16, after a newspaper reported that President Donald Trump was asking advisers whether it’s possible for the United States to buy the Arctic island.
Jonathan Nackstrand/ AFP/ Getty Images Greenland is not for sale, the mineral- rich island said Aug. 16, after a newspaper reported that President Donald Trump was asking advisers whether it’s possible for the United States to buy the Arctic island.

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