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Italy updates Arctic stance as Greenland tensions escalate

- - Italy updates Arctic stance as Greenland tensions escalate

By Angelo AmanteJanuary 16, 2026 at 2:39 AM

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Snow covers the city of Nuuk, Greenland, February 9, 2025. REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier

By Angelo Amante

ROME, Jan 16 (Reuters) - The Arctic has become a theatre of intensifying strategic rivalry, an Italian government ​paper that will be presented on Friday said, citing ‌Russia's "massive military presence" on its northern belt and the U.S. pursuit of Greenland.

Italy ‌has had observer status on the Arctic Council that oversees the region since 2013 and its policy as recent U.S.-Danish tensions over Greenland sharpened focus on the area.

In the draft policy document that ⁠has been reviewed by ‌Reuters, Rome pointed to Moscow's renewed focus on the Arctic - "where energy and mineral resources vital to the ‍country's security are located" - which included a build-up of its military presence.

"The militarization of the region, the closer partnership between the Russian Federation and ​China, the end of Sweden and Finland's neutrality following their ‌accession to NATO, and the U.S. position on Greenland are among the major drivers of change," the document said.

U.S. President Donald Trump has renewed calls for American control of Greenland to prevent Russia or China from occupying it. The island, an autonomous territory ⁠of Denmark, rejected the idea in ​talks held in Washington this week, exposing "fundamental" ​differences.

Italy flagged China's attempt to raise its Arctic profile as a self-declared "near-Arctic state," including growing interest in shipping ‍along the Northern ⁠Sea Route and closer ties with Moscow that extend to military matters.

The document said the development of Arctic shipping routes ⁠opens up "significant prospects" for shipbuilders including Italy's Fincantieri, which builds vessels that ‌can operate in extreme environments.

(Reporting by Angelo Amante; Editing ‌by Keith Weir and Thomas Derpinghaus)

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Source: “AOL Breaking”

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