Greenland 'proud' its role in U.S. security recognised as air base sore
point resolved
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[October 29, 2020]
By Nikolaj Skydsgaard
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - The United States
and Greenland have agreed to strengthen economic and trade ties after
resolving a dispute over a service contract to a U.S. air base in the
north of the Arctic island.
The Thule Air Base has been a sore point between the United States,
Greenland and Denmark since the Pentagon in 2014 awarded a service
contract to a U.S. company, breaking a decade-long agreement of keeping
it in Danish-Greenlandic hands.
After U.S. President Donald Trump's rebuffed attempt to buy the island
last year, the United States, in a renewed focus on the Arctic, set up a
consulate in Greenland and also donated $12 million in aid towards
developing the small economy.
"The case is of great importance to Greenland in principle," Greenland's
foreign minister, Steen Lynge, said in a joint statement between
Greenland and Denmark released late on Wednesday.
"We are proud that Pituffik (Thule) and Greenland's key role in American
security has now been recognised."
Under the new agreement, the United States is committed to awarding the
next contract, most likely in 2024, to a company registered in Greenland
or Denmark, with a majority ownership by Danes or Greenlanders.
Greenland, a semi-autonomous part of the Kingdom of Denmark, is largely
dependent on state aid from Denmark, which also handles most foreign and
security affairs.
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Greenland is important for the U.S. military and its ballistic
missile early warning system, as it balances Russian and Chinese
commercial and military buildups in the Arctic. The Thule base
mainly operates a missile warning system and space and satellite
surveillance.
Based on a 1951 treaty with Denmark, the United States has stationed
military personnel on Thule, known as Pituffik in Greenlandic, ever
since the Cold War, but it does not pay rent.
Up until 2014, it did however pay a Danish-Greenlandic company,
Greenland Contractors, to service the air base, a contract worth
about 600 million Danish crowns ($95 million) a year, which was
viewed as an important contribution to the island economy.
As part of the deal announced on Wednesday, Greenland and the United
states also agreed to strengthen ties on trade, mining, education
and tourism.
(Reporting by Nikolaj Skydsgaard; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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