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Denmark to buy two Boeing P-8 aircraft for Arctic surveillance

In recent months, Copenhagen has stepped up efforts to strengthen Arctic subsurface and oversea surveillance capabilities amid Russian threats and US President Donald Trump’s verbal push to acquire Greenland.

A P-8A Poseidon attached to Air Test and Evaluation Squadron (VX)1 lands at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, July 29, 2025 (US Navy).

ANKARA — The Danish Ministry of Defence says it has decided to acquire two Boeing P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft to increase the country’s combat power in the Arctic and North Atlantic.

Copenhagen said in a translated statement today that the move follows a procurement recommendation from the Nordic nation’s chief of defense, Gen. Michael Wiggers Hyldgaard.

The expected order comes as Denmark and allies meet this week at the NATO Summit in Turkey, where a spate of major weapons deals are expected to be announced, along with discussions focused on ramping up production and renewed military support for Ukraine.

In recent months, Copenhagen has stepped up efforts to strengthen Arctic subsurface and oversea surveillance capabilities amid Russian threats and US President Donald Trump’s verbal push to acquire Greenland.

“We must be able to defend all parts of the kingdom,” Hyldgaard said in the Danish MoD statement. “This also applies to the Arctic and North Atlantic areas. And we have an obligation to NATO to contribute to collective defense, not least in terms of delivering on force targets for anti-submarine warfare.”

Courtesy of the P-8 plan, “we are strengthening the Armed Forces’ task performance in terms of interception and surveillance at very long distances,” he added.

The announcement also noted that an “investigation” has been opened by the Danish Defence Command to look at the possibility of cooperating with other NATO allies on the planned fixed-wing program, which is valued at “tens of billions of [Danish] kroner,” according to local broadcaster TV2.

Potential cooperation could cover a joint unit located at a single air base, as well as operations, maintenance, and training, the Danish MoD statement added.

Canada, Germany, Norway, the United Kingdom and the US make up an allied customer base that has ordered or operates the maritime patrol aircraft.

The Poseidon is capable of carrying out a range of missions, from anti-submarine warfare and anti-surface warfare to intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance operations.