About our Northern Europe news
Latest news on Northern Europe: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Baltic states, Nordic countries, NATO.
Northern Europe — comprising the Nordic nations of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden, alongside the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — has become one of the most geopolitically consequential regions on the planet. Home to over 27 million people, it combines some of the highest living standards and most resilient democracies globally with a position on NATO's front line with Russia, making its security decisions central to the future of Europe.
The Greenland crisis has thrust Northern Europe to the top of the global agenda. US President Donald Trump escalated his demands for American control of Greenland in January 2026, threatening tariffs on Denmark and other allies and refusing to rule out military force. Although Trump backed away from the most aggressive threats at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen confirmed at the Munich Security Conference on 15 February 2026 that "we are not out of the crisis." Talks between the US, Denmark and Greenland continue without a final resolution, while a poll found 76 per cent of Greenlanders oppose becoming part of the US.
The broader security picture is equally tense. NATO launched Operation Baltic Sentry in January 2025 to protect undersea infrastructure in the Baltic Sea following a wave of suspected Russian sabotage, including the severing of the Estlink 2 power cable. A further mission, Arctic Sentry, has since been launched, with Sweden deploying Gripen fighter jets from Iceland to patrol Greenland. Finland is also set to host a full NATO Forward Presence structure under Swedish leadership in spring 2026 — a significant step in integrating the Nordic nations into the alliance's defence posture. Estonia assumed the rotating chairmanship of the Nordic-Baltic Eight (NB8) at the start of 2026, with an agenda focused on deepening security cooperation.
Culturally and economically, Northern Europe remains a global model. The Nordic countries consistently top rankings for equality, transparency, and social welfare. Iceland draws nearly all its electricity from geothermal and hydropower, Denmark is among the world's leading producers of wind energy, and the Baltic capitals — Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius — have established themselves as dynamic technology and startup hubs. Estonia in particular has built a reputation as one of the world's most digitally advanced societies.
History casts a long shadow over the region's present. The Baltic states endured Soviet occupation from 1940 until independence in 1991, an experience that shapes their acute sensitivity to Russian pressure and explains their consistent push for the strongest possible NATO commitments. The Nordic countries, meanwhile, maintained decades of careful neutrality before Finland and Sweden's landmark NATO accessions, driven by Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. That shift has fundamentally redrawn the security map of Northern Europe.
Our Ðǿմ«Ã½ feed on Northern Europe delivers continuous, up-to-date coverage across Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — from the ongoing Greenland crisis and Baltic Sea security to politics, economics, and culture across the Nordic-Baltic region.