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Denmark summons US envoy over alleged covert influence
operations
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Public broadcaster says campaigns aimed to promote
secession
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Trump has said he wants US to take over Arctic island
(Adds foreign minister comments in paragraph, Greenland MP
comment in paragraphs 5-7, 10-11)
By Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen and Soren Jeppesen
COPENHAGEN, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Denmark's foreign
minister has summoned the top U.S. diplomat in Copenhagen over
intelligence reports alleging covert influence operations by
U.S. citizens in Greenland that aimed to whip up opposition to
Danish rule, the ministry said on Wednesday.
Public broadcaster DR, citing unnamed sources, reported that
at least three Americans with ties to the Trump administration
were suspected of involvement in the efforts, which also sought
to promote Greenland's secession from Denmark to the United
States.
Neither the minister nor the broadcaster disclosed the
identities of the Americans flagged in the intelligence reports.
The U.S. embassy in Copenhagen did not immediately respond
to a request for comment.
Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory rich in
minerals and strategically located in the Arctic, has been a
focal point of U.S. interest since U.S. President Donald Trump
expressed ambitions to acquire the territory, citing national
and international security concerns.
His proposal has been firmly rejected in both Copenhagen and
Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, which holds the right to declare
independence from Denmark through a referendum.
Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen denounced any
efforts to undermine the relation between Denmark and Greenland.
"If anyone thinks they can influence it by creating a 'fifth
column' or that type of activity, then it is contrary to the way
states cooperate," said Rasmussen, calling it "completely
unacceptable".
"It is important for us to speak out very clearly against
the United States," he told reporters.
U.S. AMBITIONS
A March general election in Greenland - a former colony but
now a self-governing territory within the Kingdom of Denmark -
saw a pro-business party advocating a gradual independence
process secure victory.
Meanwhile, a party favouring rapid independence from Denmark
and closer ties with the U.S. garnered a quarter of the vote,
highlighting growing momentum for independence.
Seeking to counterbalance U.S. ambitions in the region,
Denmark has been trying to improve strained relations with
Greenland, rallying European allies for support.
While Trump has also since expressed respect for Greenland's
right to determine its own future, his comments about
potentially taking the territory by force have fuelled
uncertainty among its 57,000 inhabitants.
"The United States should not be allowed to influence our
future in this way. It is solely up to the Greenlandic people,"
Aaja Chemnitz, a Greenlandic member of the Danish parliament,
told Reuters.
Chemnitz said she believed the suspected influence
operations were part of Trump's broader campaign seeking to gain
control of the territory.
"I definitely think that this links back to the U.S.
government," Chemnitz said.
Denmark's national security and intelligence service, PET,
warned in a statement that Greenland remains a target for
influence campaigns, that could aim to exploit disagreements or
promote specific views about both Denmark and the United States.
Trump has picked PayPal ( PYPL ) co-founder Ken Howery as U.S.
ambassador to Denmark, but the U.S. mission in Copenhagen is
currently led by Charge d'affaires Mark Stroh, its website says.