Danish military stockpiled blood to treat injuries if US invaded | News World

Denmark sent blood stockpiles with soldiers this past January while facing threats from the US (Picture: EPA)

In January this 12 months, tensions reached a boiling point between Denmark and the USA as Donald Trump demanded access to Greenland.

Now, journalists on the Danish Broadcasting Corporation discovered that Danish troops stockpiled blood ahead of a possible confrontation with the US.

In January, the Prime Minister of Greenland told residents to arrange for a military invasion and flew soldiers to the icy enclave.

But along with weapons and explosives, the soldiers took blood from Danish blood banks to have available for the worst-case scenario.

Danish government officials, officers and intelligence sources revealed the data and likewise found plans to explode airport runways in case of a US invasion.

One source referenced the danger of this past January, telling DR: ‘We had not been in such a situation since April 1940.’

One other added: ‘I grew up in the course of the Cold War, and sometimes I wish I could return to the relatively stable time when world leaders knew how far they might go without triggering the worst-case scenario.’

GREENLAND - JANUARY 30: (FILE PHOTO)(EDITOR'S NOTE: This Handout image was provided by a third-party organization and may not adhere to Getty Images' editorial policy.) Danish Air Force F-35 aircraft patrol on January 30, 2026 over the east coast of Greenland. Denmark and other NATO countries increased their military presence in Greenland as U.S. President Donald Trump repeated his desire to acquire Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory. (Handout photo by Rune Dyrholm/Danish Armed Forces via Getty Images)
Danish F-16s were also stationed in Greenland this January (Picture: EPA)

Earlier this 12 months, Trump threatened to hit the UK and other European nations with 10% tariffs unless they agreed to his purchase of Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory.

Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen told a press conference on the time that it was ‘unlikely there can be a military conflict, but it may’t be ruled out.’

‘That’s why we have to be ready for all possibilities, but let’s emphasise this: Greenland is a component of NATO and, if there have been to be an escalation, it might even have consequences for the remainder of the world,’ he added.

Greenland sits within the Arctic Circle, where world powers, including China and Russia, have been jostling for military control.

And for good reason: Controlling Greenland would give a nation an outpost in a significant naval corridor connecting the Atlantic Ocean and the Arctic.

epa12755036 Danish King Frederik X (C-R) visits Arctic Basic Training and Arctic Command in Nuuk, Greenland, 18 February 2026. The king is on a three-day visit to Greenland. EPA/Bo Amstrup DENMARK OUT
Danish King Frederik visited Denmark’s training base (Picture: EPA)

As climate change melts the icecaps, the once nearly impossible-to-navigate ocean is becoming more spacious, opening up recent shipping routes.

Trump has been eyeing up the island since 2019, but he’s not the primary president to want it.

The US tried to purchase it in 1846 and again in 1946 – for the equivalent of £970million– amid the Cold War.

Under a little-known Cold War agreement, the US built the military base Thule Air Base in a distant corner of Greenland.

Now generally known as Pituffik Space Base (pronounced bee-doo-feek), the post is home to 150 personnel, who keep an eye fixed out for ballistic missile attacks.

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