US President-elect Donald Trump's recent comments have put Greenland in the global media spotlight, but what do islanders ...
A staged joke or serious threat? Trump seems intent on controlling a territory that's been part of the Danish crown since ...
Ulrik Pram Gad, a researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies in Copenhagen, said the culture and traditions in Greenland are also highly distinct from what's found in Denmark and ...
Historically, Inuit in both Nunavut and Greenland have relied on hunting, fishing, and subsistence living to survive the harsh environment. This has fostered similar traditions, tools, and practices.
So, the great Donald Trump has his eyes set on Greenland for ‘security’ reasons (metro.co.uk, Tue). I rather suspect – and perhaps I’m being cynical – that Mr Trump is more interested in the country’s ...
Greenland lies north and south of the Arctic Circle and about 500 miles from the North Pole—a position that makes it a key ...
It’s a few weeks into the year and, already, we’re planning everywhere we want to go next. Lale chats with her well-traveled ...
Pursuing our own national interest has been a priority since our nation’s founding. President Thomas Jefferson made the ...
Greenland's prime minister said Friday that the mineral-rich Arctic territory's people don't want to be Americans, but that he understands U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's interest in the ...
A statue commemorating Hans Egede, the Danish missionary who in 1728 founded Nuuk, now Greenland’s capital.Credit... Supported by By Jeffrey Gettleman Photographs by Ivor Prickett Reporting from ...
Rufus Gifford, a former U.S. ambassador to Denmark, said in a Sunday interview that the NATO alliance would be compelled to respond to any invasion or incursion into Greenland. “I think the ...
Nick Schifrin: Greenland sits in the middle of the shortest route between the U.S. and Europe and hosts the U.S.' northernmost base, now called the Pituffik Space Base, home to a ballistic missile ...