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Greenland, Star Wars or Star Trek.

Greenland, Star Wars or Star Trek.

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A frozen map point just became the hottest story on Earth. We unpack why Greenland—population 58,000—now sits at the crossroads of great-power rivalry, nuclear risk, and a fast-emerging space economy.

We start with the GIUK Gap, the narrow corridor between Greenland, Iceland, and the U.K. that shapes how submarines and missiles move into the Atlantic. As Washington looks to end the war in Ukraine and parts of Europe signal resolve, planners fear escalation and watch the Arctic closely. At the same time, Greenland’s unique status under Denmark and an unfinished path toward independence raise tensions as the U.S. asserts rights granted by a 1951 treaty. Add in memories of blunt rhetoric about “taking” the island, and you understand the local anxiety: small communities caught between sovereignty and superpower necessity.

Then we pivot to space. The Arctic anchors polar satellite links, routing data through stations like Svalbard and into subsea cables—the digital umbilical that feeds our phones, grids, and markets. After reported cable cuts in 2022, redundancy became urgent, and Greenland emerged as a logical backup site. That’s only one layer. Space-based solar power, orbital data centers, and lunar helium-3 for fusion and quantum computing are no longer far-off ideas; they’re strategic plans with real timelines and budgets. Whoever secures the Arctic gateways and ground stations influences not just warfighting but the future flow of energy and information.

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