France’s president will visit Greenland in a show of EU unity, Danish leader says
- On June 15, French President Emmanuel Macron is scheduled to travel to Nuuk, where he will participate in discussions on Arctic matters alongside officials from Denmark and Greenland.
- The visit responds to rising geopolitical tensions in the Arctic, including U.S. Interest in Greenland and increased Russian and Chinese activity.
- Macron will meet Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Greenland’s Premier Jens-Frederik Nielsen to discuss Arctic security, climate change, minerals, and European influence.
- Frederiksen described the visit as 'a concrete testimony of European unity' amid challenges, and Macron’s country holds one of the EU’s strongest militaries.
- The visit underscores Europe’s intent to secure a role in the Arctic’s future and to support Greenland amid strategic pressure from global powers.
56 Articles
56 Articles


French President Emmanuel Macron has stated that Greenland is not territory that can be seized or bought, in fact alluding to US President Donald Trump's repeated statements about wanting to take the island under American control.
The French President opened the conference by responding to his American counterpart who has views on Danish territory.
Macron’s Greenland Visit Counters U.S. Ambitions - American Faith
French President Emmanuel Macron will travel to Greenland next weekend, marking the first high-profile visit by a European Union leader to the Arctic territory since renewed U.S. interest in its strategic and mineral-rich location. Macron will join Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Greenland’s new Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen on June 15 for talks focused on regional security, economic development, and climate issues. The visit …
France’s Highly Unpopular Macron Meddles With US Foreign Policy With Upcoming Visit to Greenland Alongside Denmark’s Frederiksen
When failing French President Macron is not hiding ‘paper napkins’ in Kiev, not having his finger grabbed by Turkey’s Erdogan in Albania, not getting slapped by wife Brigitte in Vietnam, or walking hand-in-hand with Brazilian Socialist Lula, sometimes he pays attention to his deeply troubled country.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 43% of the sources lean Left
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage