Trump’s Greenland envoy faces uphill battle on mission to make ‘friends’

In a highly charged diplomatic development, Jeff Landry, the dual-role Louisiana Governor and special Greenland envoy appointed by former (as of 2026) US President Donald Trump, has touched off widespread controversy after launching his first official visit to the semi-autonomous Danish territory in the Arctic, despite arriving without an official government invitation. The visit comes in the wake of a major international crisis that erupted when Trump publicly threatened to seize Greenland by force over its strategic significance to US national security, placing the Arctic island at the center of a lingering high-stakes dispute between Washington, Copenhagen and Nuuk.

Upon disembarking from an official US government aircraft in Greenland’s capital Nuuk on Monday, Landry framed his trip as a purely constructive outreach mission. “I’m here simply to build relationships, to look, to listen and to learn,” he told assembled reporters, adding that Trump had personally instructed him to “go over there, and make a bunch of friends.” Landry’s itinerary includes participation in the “Future Greenland” business summit, a meeting with local business and community leaders, and the Thursday opening of a new US consulate building in central Nuuk. He is accompanied by a small delegation, including a US physician who told Danish broadcaster TV2 he had volunteered to evaluate local medical needs — a move Greenlandic Health Minister Anna Wangenheim has already decried as “deeply problematic.” This proposed medical assessment follows a February 2026 announcement from Trump that the US would deploy a hospital ship to Greenland, an offer immediately and flatly rejected by Greenland’s elected leadership.

Far from the friendly outreach Landry has claimed, the visit has immediately reignited long-simmering anger and distrust among Greenlandic officials and residents, who have repeatedly drawn a hard red line against any US push to acquire the territory. Just hours after Landry’s arrival, Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen reaffirmed the island’s long-stated position in a press briefing: “We clearly reiterated that the people of Greenland are not for sale and that Greenlanders have the right to self-determination.” While Nielsen acknowledged the Monday meeting between Landry, US Ambassador to Denmark Ken Howery, and his team was conducted in a “good tone,” he stressed no parallel negotiations would proceed while top-level working group talks between the three governments remain ongoing.

Greenlandic Foreign Minister Mute Egede doubled down on the government’s stance, telling Agence France-Presse that Washington has not abandoned its territorial goals. “We have our red line. The Americans’ starting point has not changed either,” he said. For many ordinary Greenlanders and public figures, the timing of the visit — coming just four months after mass protests in Nuuk against Trump’s territorial claims — is seen as deeply inappropriate. Maliina Abelsen, a Greenlandic businesswoman and former politician who declined Landry’s meeting invitation, argued that the envoy should have waited until tensions cooled significantly. “It’s only four months ago that we felt very threatened by the US, so the timing is not appropriate,” she said, criticizing the visit as an attempt to bypass established diplomatic protocols. Aqqaluk Lynge, an Inuit author and former president of the Inuit Circumpolar Council, noted that the crisis has frayed longstanding positive ties between Greenland and the US. “There is so much distrust now,” he said. “The sad thing is we have had a beautiful relationship with the people in the US, especially with the indigenous people.”

During comments to reporters at the “Future Greenland” summit on Tuesday, Landry defended the Trump administration’s approach, claiming that prior US governments had completely overlooked the Arctic territory. “Before Donald Trump, the United States was ignoring Greenland,” he said. “When was the last time that any high-level diplomats came to Greenland? Who cares more about Greenlanders than the Trump administration and the president? Because seemingly before the president, no one cared. Greenland didn’t exist, until Donald Trump put it on the map.” When asked directly whether Trump still holds the goal of absorbing Greenland into the US, Landry deflected, telling the BBC: “You’ll have to talk to the president yourself.”

Rasmus Sinding Søndergaard, a senior researcher of American foreign policy at the Danish Institute of International Studies, characterized Landry’s conciliatory public tone as a deliberate tactical shift from the Trump administration’s earlier open coercion. “I think it’s a change in tactics,” he explained. “The approach now is to try and befriend people, rather than coerce them.”

The upcoming consulate opening has already become a flashpoint for criticism: the modern central Nuuk high-rise that houses the facility has already been nicknamed “Trump Towers” by local residents, and multiple high-profile Greenlandic politicians have said they will boycott the event. Naaja H. Nathanielsen, a Greenlandic MP and former business minister who will skip the opening, argued that Landry’s underlying mission remains unchanged. “Landry is tasked to help the president acquire Greenland. That is a reason why he’s here to ‘listen’ and visit, and that in itself is, I think, still very serious.”

To date, the three-nation working group established after Trump walked back his threat of military force has not reached a final resolution to the dispute. While public tensions have eased slightly in recent months, multiple reports have confirmed the US continues to push for expanded military access to the strategically located Arctic territory, leaving the core dispute unresolved and local populations on edge.