Canada pivots to Nordic Arctic allies as Trump pushes Greenland seizure and Russia ramps up pressure

Canada wants Greenland Rangers built without U S rescue
Canada is rapidly deepening defense cooperation with Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden to secure the Arctic as U.S. backing appears less certain after Donald Trump’s threats to seize Greenland. Canadian officials say they are moving beyond reliance on American protection, while Russia expands military activity and China grows involvement in Arctic resources. Prime Minister Mark Carney frames the shift as “middle power” alliance-building, including Ranger-style concepts, defense production ramp-ups, and ongoing talks on Greenland security.
- Talks aim to adapt the Canadian Rangers model for Greenland
- Canada is trying to reduce reliance on U.S. Arctic protection
- Prime Minister Mark Carney is strengthening Nordic security ties
- March agreement includes deeper military procurement and defense output
- Plan for Greenland Ranger adaptation expected by year end
- Canada says Russia is the Arctic’s biggest threat
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
