As the president-elect’s call to buy—or take—a sovereign country moves from punchline to possibility, a look at the real stakes of the Arctic’s mounting cold war.

When Donald Trump Jr. landed in Greenland last week — flying in aboard ​“Trump Force One,” with two of his father’s top advisors, plus right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, in tow — he claimed that he’d come as a tourist. Speaking to a small group of spectators at the recently opened international airport in Nuuk, a city of about 20,000 people just below the Arctic circle, he intimated that he was there to see the sights and gather material for his podcast on a ​“very long personal day trip.” Greenland, he said, is an ​“awesome country” and the scenery ​“spectacular.” After stopping by the national museum, he said he was impressed with the ​“old hunting styles” and ​“clothes” of the island’s early inhabitants.

The Trump team, in typical fashion, claimed victory after the visit, citing support from the locals in Nuuk and quickly distributing a polished, campaign-style video. But Politico, the Washington Post, and Danish news outlet DR News have reported that the visit was at least in part ​“staged” and that many of the MAGA-hat wearing residents who dined with the president’s son were living on the margins and had essentially been bribed to attend.

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