
President Donald Trump capped a week of intense U.S. activity in Greenland by posting a meme on Friday showing his face looming over the Arctic island beneath the words “Hello, Greenland!”, published on Truth Social in the wake of his special envoy’s visit and the opening of a far larger American consulate in Nuuk.
The president and his allies routinely use social media memes both to troll political opponents and to push policy aims. Last January, Katie Miller, a former administration official and wife of top Trump aide Stephen Miller, posted an image of Greenland draped in the Stars and Stripes with the caption “SOON,” prompting Denmark’s ambassador in Washington to publicly demand “full respect for the territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Denmark.”
The latest post landed against a tense backdrop. On Thursday, the U.S. inaugurated a new downtown consulate, and hundreds of Greenlanders demonstrated outside, waving Greenlandic flags, chanting “go home” and carrying placards reading “Stop USA.” Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen and other ministers declined invitations to attend.

The opening capped the Future Greenland business conference, where U.S. Ambassador to Denmark Kenneth Howery cast the new consulate as a way to bring the two sides “closer.” Trump’s special envoy, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, was in Nuuk for talks the same week, meetings after which Greenland said progress had been made but the island would never be for sale.
The diplomatic charm offensive runs alongside a harder ask. Washington is pressing for three new military bases in southern Greenland, beyond its lone existing outpost at Pituffik and has floated designating the installations as U.S. “sovereign territory,” a demand that has baffled military experts given that a 1951 defense agreement already grants the US sweeping access to the island.
The meme is the latest beat in a standoff that produced the largest demonstrations in Greenland’s history in January and that remains unresolved as Washington presses for a deal Nuuk and Copenhagen have repeatedly rejected.

