And Then There Were Three: Greenland’s Government Loses a Partner (And Its Majority)

[Photo by Marc Lanteigne] by Marc Lanteigne Greenland’s political system is facing a major shakeup this week, as one of the four parties making up the governing coalition, Partii Naleraq [In Danish/Greenlandic] (PN) announced that it was withdrawing its support [In Danish]. This move was in protest of plans for increased Danish-Greenlandic financial cooperation in the refurbishment of… Continue reading And Then There Were Three: Greenland’s Government Loses a Partner (And Its Majority)

The Long Game? Russia Prepares for Siberian Military Exercises

On 11-15 September, the Russian military will be engaging in military exercises on a scale not seen since the ‘Zapad-81’ (Запад-81) war games conducted by the then-Soviet Army and the Warsaw Pact in 1981. The manoeuvres will take place in Siberia and the Russian Far East (RFE), with China and Mongolia also providing troops and support. The… Continue reading The Long Game? Russia Prepares for Siberian Military Exercises

Japan and the Arctic: Challenges at Sea

Among the growing number of non-Arctic states which have recently begun to better define and expand their circumpolar policies, Japan has not had the same international visibility as compared with China and Western Europe. Tokyo had sought to address that omission during the Arctic Circle conference in Reykjavík in October 2015 with the announcement, during… Continue reading Japan and the Arctic: Challenges at Sea

Militarisation in the Arctic: Views from the United Kingdom

The question of whether the Arctic region, often referred to as ‘High North, low tension’ in both government and research circles, is beginning to lose its long-held status as a military-free zone, has resurfaced over the past few weeks in the wake of a new report by the Government of the United Kingdom on British defence… Continue reading Militarisation in the Arctic: Views from the United Kingdom