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Greenland’s critical minerals reserves and Arctic access could come with U.S. strategic benefits. CFR President Mike Froman ...
The Arctic island's ambitions of playing competitive international football remain a pipe dream after its pathway to FIFA ...
Unfortunately, cold-war victory led to geostrategic complacency, not just in Washington, but across NATO and bilateral ...
F OR MORE than four centuries, wave after wave of explorers experienced failure as they searched for an east-west maritime ...
During a House Armed Services Committee hearing in July, Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA) introduced an amendment that'd prevent the ...
Have you ever imagined a place where the sun sets at the stroke of midnight, where icebergs calve with the force of thunder, ...
When world traveler Richard Yelen of Kingston heard United Airlines was about to offer nonstop commercial flights between the ...
With a population of just over 55,000, the biggest island in the world has its own parliament, but foreign policy is ...
In the latest move from Denmark to bolster northern security, Copenhagen signed an agreement this month to buy four ...
Greenland may feel like an icy curiosity to most Americans, but who controls it could reshape Arctic shipping, missile defense, and power in the north.
Alan Leventhal, the former U.S. ambassador to Denmark, and Casey Sherman, NYT best-selling author, engage in a conversation about Greenland, and more.
A violent subglacial flood in Greenland ruptured the ice from below—forcing scientists to rethink ice sheet behavior.