Putin’s first public remarks on Trump’s Greenland ambition reveal Moscow’s calculated detachment as Washington’s Arctic push strains NATO unity.
Russian President Vladimir Putin broke his silence on Donald Trump’s Greenland takeover push with a shrug, telling Russia’s Security Council that the island’s fate is “of no concern to us whatsoever” and floating a back-of-the-envelope price tag of $1 billion should Washington and Copenhagen strike a deal.
Putin’s comments, delivered Wednesday in Moscow, mark the Kremlin’s first public stance since Trump revived talk of buying the semi-autonomous Danish territory. The remarks come as the U.S. president, speaking from Davos, ruled out military force but hinted at tariffs to pressure Denmark, deepening the most serious trans-Atlantic rift in decades.
Why Putin Is Happy to Sit This One Out
From the Kremlin’s vantage point, the Greenland saga is a strategic gift: it fractures NATO solidarity, distracts Washington from Ukraine, and forces Brussels to choose sides between an assertive Washington and a defensive Copenhagen.
- Distraction value: Every day U.S. diplomats spend parsing Arctic real estate is a day they spend less on coordinating sanctions or arming Kyiv.
- Energy leverage: Russia already controls half the Arctic coastline; a U.S.-Denmark showdown keeps Western navies focused south of the pole.
- Precedent play: By recalling Russia’s 1867 sale of Alaska for $7.2 million, Putin frames land transfers as routine great-power housekeeping rather than imperial overreach.
“Denmark has always treated Greenland as a colony,” Putin said, needling Copenhagen while carefully avoiding criticism of Trump, who is positioning himself as a potential Ukraine peace broker.
The Billion-Dollar Math Behind the Trolling
Putin’s arithmetic is as political as it is financial. Using the Alaska purchase price, adjusting for inflation, gold-price movements, and Greenland’s larger landmass, he arrived at the $1 billion figure—a rounding error for the U.S. defense budget but a number calibrated to sound both plausible and dismissive.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov doubled down Tuesday, declaring Greenland “not a natural part” of Denmark—language that echoes Moscow’s 2014 characterization of Crimea as historically Russian. The message: if Washington wants to rewrite borders, Russia reserves the right to remember its own shopping list.
Arctic Chessboard: Assets and Ambitions
Greenland sits atop an estimated 50 billion barrels of undiscovered oil and gas and hosts the Pituffik Space Base, America’s northernmost ballistic-missile early-warning site. Control of the island would give Washington the prime position to monitor Russian submarines transiting the GIUK gap and to project power into the fastest-warming ocean on Earth.
Moscow, for its part, has reopened 50 Soviet-era Arctic bases, deployed hypersonic missiles to the region, and filed UN claims extending its continental shelf to the North Pole. Yet Putin calculates that a U.S.-Danish confrontation keeps NATO planners tied up in legal knots rather than military ones.
Historical Echoes: From Alaska to Virgin Islands
Putin’s history lesson is selective but pointed:
- 1867: Russia sells Alaska to the U.S. for 2 cents an acre, citing an inability to defend it.
- 1917: Denmark sells the Virgin Islands to Washington weeks before the U.S. enters World War I.
- 1946: The Truman administration quietly offers Denmark $100 million for Greenland; offer is declined.
By invoking these precedents, Putin normalizes the idea that sovereignty over strategic islands is negotiable—especially when the seller needs cash or security guarantees.
What Happens Next
Expect three flashpoints:
- June 2026: Greenland hosts parliamentary elections; pro-independence parties lead polls, giving Trump a potential “deal with Nuuk, not Copenhagen” narrative.
- NATO summit July 2026: Denmark will seek explicit alliance backing that any coercion of Greenland triggers Article 5.
- UN Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf: Both Russia and Denmark have overlapping claims; a U.S. purchase would scramble submissions due in 2027.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon’s 2026 Arctic Strategy—due in April—will likely recommend expanding Pituffik and pre-positioning F-35s at Thule, moves that would proceed regardless of who signs the deeds.
Bottom Line
Putin’s detachment is tactical, not philosophical. By calling Greenland a “billion-dollar yard sale,” he weaponizes Trump’s transactional rhetoric against NATO while keeping Russia’s Arctic flank secure. The more Washington and Copenhagen argue over price, flags, and self-determination, the less unified the West appears in pushing back against Moscow’s own revisionism elsewhere.
Stay locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative analysis as the Arctic’s newest great-power standoff unfolds.