CMV: Trump's Greenland Push Is Destroying America's Moral Authority on Territorial Sovereignty
I'm watching the Greenland situation unfold from the Middle East, and I have to say: this might be the biggest self-inflicted wound to American credibility I've seen in my lifetime.
For decades, the United States has lectured the world about respecting territorial sovereignty, the "rules-based international order," and the sanctity of borders. They've imposed sanctions, led coalitions, and condemned nations for territorial aggression. Now, Trump is openly threatening military force to annex Greenland from a NATO ally, and threatening tariffs against any country that opposes him.
Here's why I think this is strategically catastrophic:
1. Hypocrisy That Everyone Will Remember
When Russia annexed Crimea, the U.S. led international condemnation. When China makes claims in the South China Sea, America calls it aggression. But now Trump is doing exactly what he condemned others for, except against a democratic ally. How can America ever again claim moral high ground on territorial disputes? Every future U.S. statement on sovereignty will be met with "What about Greenland?"
2. Pushing Europe Toward China and Russia
Trump claims this move counters Russian and Chinese influence in the Arctic. But Denmark's foreign minister just left the White House with a "grave expression," describing "fundamental disagreement." Thousands are protesting in Copenhagen. NATO is in crisis mode. European officials are calling this "an earthquake that could destroy NATO."
If America shows it cannot be trusted, Europe will be forced to find other partners. China has been waiting for exactly this opportunity. The EU-Mercosur deal was just finalized, partly because Europe can no longer rely on America. This is pushing traditional U.S. allies into Beijing's arms.
3. Undermining the Entire Post-WW2 System
The international order America built after World War II was based on one core principle: might doesn't make right. Borders should not be changed by force. That system benefited America enormously. Now Trump is tearing it down for an island that's already a NATO ally where the U.S. has full military access.
Denmark already allows the U.S. to operate freely in Greenland. There's a U.S. base there (Pituffik). Trump could expand U.S. presence tomorrow without threatening annexation. So this isn't about security, it's about conquest.
4. Setting a Precedent for the World
From where I sit in the Middle East, I see what message this sends: if you're strong enough, take what you want. No rules matter. This will embolden every territorial dispute globally. If America can threaten to seize Greenland from Denmark, why can't stronger regional powers do the same to their neighbors?
5. The "Golden Dome" Excuse Doesn't Hold Up
Trump says he needs Greenland for the "Golden Dome" missile defense system. But defense experts point out that as a NATO member, Greenland is already covered by Article 5. The U.S. already has the access it needs. This reasoning is so weak that even Trump's own former officials are calling it absurd.
My View:
I believe Trump is making a catastrophic error that will be studied in history books as the moment American global leadership collapsed. He's destroying seven decades of American soft power for a piece of territory the U.S. already has access to. He's proving to the world that America only believes in "rules" when they benefit America.
Change my view. Is there a strategic rationale I'm missing? Is there a way this actually strengthens America's position globally? Because from the Middle East, where we've seen what happens when great powers ignore sovereignty, this looks like the beginning of a much more dangerous world.
2 Comments