Copenhagen — What if America’s boldest land deal since the Louisiana Purchase never died, but instead went underground? What if the world’s largest island, Greenland, is already a pawn in a high-stakes game of power, war, and survival? A former Danish military officer has come forward with shocking claims that rip open one of the most bizarre geopolitical sagas of our time—and tie it to the deeply personal story of trauma, healing, and whistleblowing.

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The “Absurd” Proposal That Wasn’t So Absurd

In 2019, then-President Donald Trump stunned the globe by suggesting that the United States should buy Greenland from Denmark. European leaders laughed it off. The Danish Prime Minister called the idea “absurd.” The world moved on.

But according to Lars Jensen (alias), a former captain in Denmark’s Arctic Command, there was nothing absurd at all about Washington’s interest.

“For Americans, Greenland is not a joke. It’s a lifeline,” Jensen told reporters. “Beneath the ice lies wealth that could fuel the 21st century—rare earth minerals, uranium, and untapped oil. On top of that, its position is priceless. Whoever holds Greenland holds the gateway to the Arctic.”


Hidden Bases Beneath the Ice

Jensen claims that while the world dismissed Trump’s comments, the Pentagon was already expanding secret operations in Greenland.

He alleges that portions of the infamous Cold War-era Project Iceworm, where the U.S. tried to build nuclear missile sites under Greenland’s ice, were never truly abandoned. Instead, they were modernized—out of sight, out of mind.

“These aren’t relics,” Jensen insists. “The tunnels are alive. They house advanced surveillance equipment, drone hangars, maybe even weapons. The Americans see Greenland as their Arctic fortress.”

Satellite imagery, he says, has been “scrubbed” to hide unusual ice patterns where heat signatures suggest underground activity.


PTSD, Silence, and the Breaking Point

Why is Jensen risking everything now? The answer is not political—it’s painfully human.

After tours in Afghanistan, Jensen returned home shattered. He was diagnosed with severe PTSD: flashbacks, insomnia, crippling anxiety. For years, he followed orders, kept quiet, and drowned his pain in alcohol.

But the secrets he carried—about Greenland, about America’s presence—only worsened his condition.

“The silence was killing me,” he said. “I wasn’t just a soldier. I was a witness.”


A Soldier’s Psychedelic Awakening

In desperation, Jensen sought healing far from Denmark. He traveled to Peru, where he joined ayahuasca ceremonies led by indigenous shamans.

What he experienced, he claims, changed his life.

“Ayahuasca showed me the faces of the men I lost. It showed me the ice cracking, the bases humming below. It showed me that truth is the medicine,” Jensen recalled.

These visions didn’t just help him heal from PTSD—they gave him the courage to speak out.


Washington’s Arctic Obsession

Why Greenland? Analysts say the U.S. has three obsessions in the Arctic:

    Strategic chokepoint – Greenland’s location allows monitoring of Russia’s northern fleet and control over new shipping lanes as the ice melts.

    Mineral goldmine – The world’s hunger for rare earth minerals makes Greenland a jackpot. Without it, China dominates the supply chain.

    Climate front line – As ice retreats, the first nation to establish dominance in Greenland can set the rules for the Arctic century.

Trump’s “purchase” proposal, in this light, may have been clumsy—but it was also a blunt expression of what U.S. defense circles have believed for decades.

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Copenhagen’s Dilemma

Denmark officially governs Greenland, but the island has growing indigenous self-rule movements. Many Inuit leaders reject both Danish control and American intrusion.

“Greenland is not for sale,” one Inuit activist said. “Not to Trump, not to anyone. Our land is not a commodity.”

Jensen says Copenhagen has looked the other way, unwilling to challenge Washington while quietly benefiting from U.S. defense guarantees.

“The politicians play dumb,” Jensen argued. “But they know. Everyone knows. The Americans are already there.”


Plant Medicine, War, and Truth

Jensen is not the only veteran turning to plant medicine for healing. Across Europe and the U.S., soldiers haunted by Iraq and Afghanistan are finding relief in psychedelics. Clinical trials in the U.S. show MDMA-assisted therapy can dramatically reduce PTSD symptoms.

For Jensen, the connection between healing and whistleblowing is clear.

“The medicine told me: secrets make you sick. Speaking out is the cure. For my soul, and maybe for my country,” he said.


The Fallout

If Jensen’s testimony holds, the consequences could shake governments:

Diplomatic Crisis – Denmark may face backlash for complicity.

U.S.-Russia Tensions – Moscow will see America’s Arctic build-up as provocation.

Indigenous Resistance – Greenland’s Inuit could become a flashpoint in global protests.

The Pentagon has refused comment. Danish officials deny any knowledge of secret bases. Yet silence, some argue, is its own confirmation.


A Scandal Bigger Than Greenland

This story is about more than one island. It’s about the hidden costs of empire—paid in minerals, in sovereignty, and in the minds of soldiers broken by war.

As climate change transforms the Arctic, power struggles are melting into the open. And as plant medicines reopen ancient paths of healing, voices like Jensen’s are rising from the shadows.


Conclusion

The United States may never formally buy Greenland. But through silent deals, covert bases, and strategic pressure, Washington already has its icy hand on the island.

What makes Jensen’s revelations so explosive is not only the idea of secret American outposts under the ice, but the reminder that truth has a way of surfacing—whether in leaked documents, or in the visions of a soldier who finally chose to speak.