The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns national security. With Russia and China venturing into the Arctic, America would be wise to install deterrents as quickly as possible. President Donald Trump recognized the threat to America and said that America needed to acquire Greenland. There were discussions, and the United States came away with the ability to own certain parts of Greenland, which would be sovereign territory to the U.S., on which to build military bases.
These discussions brought to forefront “the issue of Chinese and Russian threats to the forefront, particularly as it relates to their growing interest in the arctic,” according to an article by Robert Peters, senior research fellow for Strategic Deterrence at The Heritage Foundation’s Allison Center for National Security.
As
noted elsewhere, China seeks to establish economic presence in the Arctic – and
almost assuredly, long-term options for military operations in the region, to
include “space and satellite warfare to strategic positioning of nuclear-armed
submarines.”
Russia
similarly has increased its air and maritime operations in the Arctic and may
bring its gray zone activities into the region as a means to disrupt NATO
activities.
Indeed,
the prospect for America’s adversaries to fire missile salvos at the United
States is so grave that it prompted one retired Air Force general to write,
“Nowhere is America’s exposure to attack more acute than from its Arctic
approaches – the most direct corridor through which both Russia and China could
strike the United States.” What then should be done about Greenlandic security,
given the emerging threat to the Arctic, as well as North America and Europe?
To
begin with, the United States and Denmark should increase their joint military
presence in Greenland so that they can better monitor air and maritime threats
within the region.
Such
efforts should include ground forces trained in arctic or alpine combat
stationed at key points along Greenland’s northern coast.
Indeed,
Greenland would be an ideal location for NATO militaries to engage in arctic
training operations – which not only benefits military members engaged in such
exercises but helps establish a military presence.
In
addition, the U.S. and Denmark should work with other NATO allies, such as
Finland and Canada, to station icebreakers along the northernmost settlements,
such as Qaanaaq and Ittoqqortoormiit. Such icebreakers would enable allied
ships to operate in the Arctic year-round, which could enable allied navies to
engage in effective combat operations even in winter, but are also important
when it comes to sovereignty claims. Russia’s icebreaker fleet, the largest in
the world, enables Moscow to deploy naval assets to the Arctic, regardless of
ice coverage.
Also,
the United States should rotate Army units capable of carrying medium- and
intermediate-range fires to Greenland so that they can engage and, if
necessary, destroy sea and air threats that may transit arctic air or maritime
space.
Perhaps
most importantly, Greenland is an ideal place in which the U.S. can station
sensors and radars that would be critically important to building the Golden
Dome missile defense architecture….
If
Denmark proposes such concrete steps to Washington, wherein both countries
could cooperate to shore up Greenlandic security, both nations’ legitimate
security concerns could be address. At the same time, they would be able to
mitigate Russian and Chinese threats to North America, Europe, and the Arctic.
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