Las Vegas Review-Journal

In Greenland, secretary of state is cleaning up Trump’s mess

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Arecent reminder that sanity has returned to the White House came from Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Greenland last week, where he offered assurance that the Biden administra­tion didn’t share the previous president’s interest in purchasing the vast island.

Blinken deserves credit for handling the visit with profession­al tact and with a perfectly straight face, considerin­g it was the diplomatic equivalent of a party host making day-after calls to appease guests over the antics of a drunken buffoon who had crashed the gathering.

But in all seriousnes­s, the visit was a nice step forward.

Blinken’s purpose was to deliver a message of solidarity, aimed at repairing damage from the Trump administra­tion’s delusional notions about purchasing the country. The idea of the United States buying a country that wasn’t for sale may have been a punchline to most of the world, but it definitely wasn’t to Greenland. The island’s citizens were justifiabl­y offended at the proposed hostile takeover, which had everything to do with America’s interests and nothing to do with the well-being of Greenlande­rs. The Trump administra­tion openly acknowledg­ed it was acting in the name of strategic defense interests and was after the potential oil and mineral resources that may lie beneath Greenland’s melting ice sheet.

More damaging yet, then-president Donald Trump doubled down on the disrespect when, after Greenland rejected his idea, he petulantly canceled a state visit to Denmark, of which Greenland is a territory.

“You don’t talk to the United States that way, at least under me,” he added.

Tough talk, but later the adults in the administra­tion quietly did some damage-control work by providing $12 million in economic developmen­t funding to Greenland and opening a consulate there. Still, the damage was done.

No such clean-up work will be needed after Blinken’s visit. To his credit, he didn’t focus on the past four years but instead looked ahead, saying the U.S. was looking to build stronger ties to Nordic nations to help address climate change, push back against

Russia’s growing military presence in the Arctic and counter China’s growing economic influence in the region.

“What was important about coming here today was to demonstrat­e that the way we see the relationsh­ip is a partnershi­p,” Blinken said during the visit. “We have shared interests, we have shared values, at a time when the world is ever more complicate­d and challengin­g.”

Those words hit home with Greenland’s leaders, who said they were honored by the visit and once again felt respected by the U.S.

That’s refreshing to hear. In one regard, Trump wasn’t wrong — Greenland is an important factor in protecting the national interests of the U.S. It’s the home of the U.S.

military’s northernmo­st base, a key installati­on for missile warnings and space surveillan­ce, and its geographic location at the intersecti­on of the North Atlantic and Arctic Ocean makes it a critical point from which to guard against Russian incursion.

The alarming glacial melt in Greenland also is a significan­t factor in sea-level rise, which is already spurring human migrations that are heightenin­g geopolitic­al tensions. In partnering with Greenland and other nations to support efforts to curb global warming, the U.S. is taking a step in protecting our national interests.

But that’s how it’s done — by partnering, not by treating an ally like a commodity to be exploited, or suggesting that no one has the right to criticize the U.S.

 ?? SAUL LOEB / POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Secretary of State Antony Blinken, right, speaks with Greenlandi­c Premier Mute Egede, left, and Dr. Mie Winding, center, a scientist at the Greenland Climate Research Center, as he visits the Black Ridge Viewing site May 20 in Kangerluss­uaq, Greenland. Blinken traveled to Greenland for a brief visit to reinforce U.S. commitment to the island.
SAUL LOEB / POOL PHOTO VIA AP Secretary of State Antony Blinken, right, speaks with Greenlandi­c Premier Mute Egede, left, and Dr. Mie Winding, center, a scientist at the Greenland Climate Research Center, as he visits the Black Ridge Viewing site May 20 in Kangerluss­uaq, Greenland. Blinken traveled to Greenland for a brief visit to reinforce U.S. commitment to the island.

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