The chairman of the Danish Parliament’s defense committee advised NATO countries on Wednesday to avoid the buy of U.S. military equipment, including Lockheed Martin [LMT] F-35s fighters.
“As one of the decision makers behind Denmark’s purchase of F-35s, I regret it,” Rasmus Jarlov wrote on X. “The USA can certainly disable the planes by simply stopping the supply of spare parts. They want to strengthen Russia and weaken Europe and are showing that they are willing to do tremendous damage to peaceful and loyal allies like Canada just because they insist on existing as a country.”
President Trump has said that he wants to make Canada the U.S.’ 51st state and that he wants to acquire Greenland from Denmark.
“I can easily imagine a situation where the USA will demand Greenland from Denmark and will threaten to deactivate our weapons and let Russia attack us when we refuse,” Jarlov wrote. “Therefore, buying American weapons is a security risk that we cannot run. We will make enormous investments in air defense, fighter jets, artillery and other weapons in the coming years, and we must avoid American weapons, if at all possible.”
“I encourage our allies and friend to do the same,” he wrote.
In 2016, Denmark chose the F-35 to replace the country’s F-16s, and the Danish Parliament in 2017 funded the buy of 27 aircraft. Denmark has received 8 F-35s so far, and the planes are to begin taking over the Danish air denial mission from the country’s F-16s on April 1.
Jarlov’s warning comes a week after Portugal Defense Minister Nuno Melo said that his country is unlikely to buy the F-35 despite the Portuguese Air Force recommending the fighter as the prime candidate to replace the country’s F-16s.
“We cannot ignore the geopolitical environment in our choices,” Melo said. “The recent position of the United States, in the context of NATO…must make us think about the best options, because the predictability of our allies is a greater asset to take into account.” Melo said that Portugal is concerned that the U.S. “could bring limitations to use, maintenance, components, and everything that has to do with ensuring that aircraft will be operational and used in all types of scenarios.” Instead of up to 28 F-35s, Portugal may now opt for the Rafale or Eurofighter.
In April 2021 Lockheed Martin and Danish officials held a ceremony at the company’s F-35 factory in Fort Worth for the induction of the F-35A to the Royal Danish Air Force (Defense Daily, Apr. 7, 2021). At that ceremony, then Danish Defense Minister Trine Bramsen said that the F-35A “will be at the absolute center for the Danish Defense in the coming decades” and will gird the Royal Danish Air Force’s interoperability with NATO allies.
Denmark said that it scrambled F-16s 81 times last year, mostly to monitor Russian flights over the Baltic Sea.
While Trump and his advisers have pushed NATO allies to increase their defense spending to five percent of their respective GDPs, such increases may well come without the participation of U.S. defense companies.
A March 19 European Union white paper on defense argues for countries to invest 800 billion Euros in the next four years in defense to bring their defense spending up by 1.5 percent of their GDPs.
“Authoritarian states like China increasingly seek to assert their authority and control in our economy and society,” the paper said. “Traditional allies and partners, such as the United States, are changing their focus away from Europe to other regions of the world. This is something that we have been warned about many times but is now happening faster than many had anticipated. The moment has come for Europe to re-arm.”