WASHINGTON / NUUK — A public disagreement between the United States and Greenland escalated over the weekend after Greenland’s prime minister rejected President Donald Trump’s offer to send a U.S. Navy hospital ship to the Arctic territory.
The exchange played out largely in public, with Trump announcing the idea on social media and Greenland’s leadership pushing back just as directly.
At issue is whether Greenland needs outside medical help at all.
Trump proposes hospital ship
On Saturday, Trump wrote that the United States, working with his special envoy to Greenland, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, would send a “great hospital boat” to the territory. The goal, he said, was to “take care of the many people who are sick, and not being taken care of there.”
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/VQmnGQnepz
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) February 22, 2026
Landry later defended the proposal, saying that after speaking with Greenlanders about daily challenges, “one issue stood out — health care.”
“President Donald J. Trump and America care,” Landry wrote in response to criticism. “Shame on Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen!”
Landry argued that some Greenland residents must travel long distances for specialized treatment, suggesting a U.S. hospital ship could ease that burden.
Greenland is vast and sparsely populated, with many small communities accessible only by air or sea. Travel for advanced medical care can be time-consuming and expensive.
Still, the proposal quickly ran into resistance.
Greenland and Denmark push back
Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen rejected the offer outright. He said Greenland does not need a U.S. hospital ship and emphasized that residents already receive free care through the territory’s publicly funded health system.
Nielsen also criticized the way the proposal was announced, calling for direct consultation rather than unilateral statements on social media.
As Fox News reports:
“President Trump’s idea of sending an American hospital ship here to Greenland has been noted,” Nielsen wrote in a translated Facebook post. “But we have a public healthcare system where treatment is free for citizens.
“It is a deliberate choice.”
Greenland remains open to dialogue and cooperation with the U.S., with a caveat, according to Nielsen.
“But talk to us instead of just making more or less random outbursts on social media,” Nielsen said in his own public Facebook protestation.
Denmark, which oversees Greenland’s defense and foreign affairs, backed him up. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and other officials defended their universal health care system and questioned why American intervention would be necessary.
Danish officials noted that Greenlanders receive treatment locally when possible and are sent to Denmark for specialized care when needed. They framed the U.S. offer as unnecessary and potentially disruptive.
The timing of Trump’s announcement raised eyebrows. Just days earlier, Denmark’s Joint Arctic Command had evacuated a U.S. submarine crew member near Greenland for urgent medical care. Local leaders pointed to that incident as evidence that existing cooperation already works.
Questions about feasibility
The proposal also faces practical hurdles.
Both U.S. Navy hospital ships — the USNS Mercy and the USNS Comfort — are currently undergoing maintenance in Alabama. Pentagon officials referred questions about any potential deployment to the White House. The White House did not release a detailed plan outlining when or how a ship would be sent.
Without a clear timeline or operational details, it remains unclear whether the offer was a concrete policy move or a broader political statement.
Strategic backdrop
The dispute comes amid heightened interest in the Arctic, where climate change is opening new shipping routes and access to natural resources. Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory, sits at the center of that strategic map.
Trump has previously expressed interest in expanding U.S. influence in Greenland and appointed Landry as a special envoy to the territory. Those efforts have drawn criticism from European leaders who see them as heavy-handed.
This latest clash underscores the sensitivity surrounding U.S. engagement there. Even offers framed as humanitarian can carry geopolitical weight.
For now, Greenland’s leadership has made its position clear: it does not want a U.S. hospital ship, and it does not believe one is needed. Whether Washington presses the issue remains to be seen.
READ NEXT: Historic Landmark Targeted In Anti-Trump Vandalism





