Trade 100 million USD for an island? The Cold War rivalry between the US and Denmark

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After the end of World War II, the power struggle between the United States and the Soviet Union had just begun. Greenland, a strategic stronghold in the Arctic, became a key target in the Truman administration’s eyes.

The $100 Million “Purchase Plan”

At the end of 1946, U.S. Secretary of State Byrnes convened a top-secret high-level meeting in New York. In front of Danish Foreign Minister Rasmussen, he handed over a memorandum proposing a bold idea: since Greenland was an economic burden to Denmark, the U.S. was willing to spend $100 million to buy it outright. Byrnes even offered an even more enticing deal — exchanging Denmark’s territory for the Cape Barrow area in Alaska plus a large sum of money.

The proposal was casually worded and straightforward: the U.S. needed Greenland to defend against the Soviet threat, making this a “clean and neat” solution for both sides. But Rasmussen was shocked on the spot — this was not a business negotiation, but naked territorial ambition.

Why Denmark Refused

National sovereignty and territorial integrity were of course Denmark’s bottom line, but the real concern stemmed from deeper geopolitical realities. At this time, Soviet power was at its peak. If Denmark ceded Greenland to the U.S., it would mean handing over control of the Arctic entirely, which was tantamount to directly provoking Moscow. The Soviet Union could very well use this as an excuse to retaliate against Denmark’s mainland in the Baltic Sea.

Under the shadow of the Cold War between the U.S. and the USSR, Denmark ultimately chose to preserve its territorial integrity.

America’s “Settling for Second Best”

The deal fell through, but the Americans did not leave empty-handed. They shifted strategies, exerting strong political pressure on Denmark, ultimately pushing for the signing of the U.S.-Danish Greenland Defense Agreement.

The brilliance of this agreement was that — the U.S. did not have to spend that $100 million, nor bear the costs of Greenland’s livelihood and economy, yet gained exclusive military rights to the Thule Air Base (now called Pituffik Space Base) in the northwest. The U.S. secured the greatest strategic benefit at the smallest cost, perfectly exemplifying what diplomacy called “playing both sides.”

This failed real estate deal eventually evolved into a key move for the U.S. Arctic defense line during the Cold War.

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