After weeks of political deadlock, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has finally formed a government in Denmark. This development is not merely a domestic affair; it is a critical chess move in the Nordic security architecture. The UK’s immediate endorsement of Copenhagen as a key NATO partner signals a calculated alignment of interests, underscoring the alliance’s focus on countering Russian aggression in the High North.
For years, Denmark’s political instability was a vulnerability in NATO’s northern flank. Frederiksen’s new coalition, which includes the Social Democrats, the Liberal Party, and the Conservatives, brings a promise of continuity in defence spending. Under her previous tenure, Copenhagen committed to meeting the 2% GDP threshold by 2033, but the procurement pipeline remains sluggish. The new government must now accelerate acquisitions of F-35s and maritime patrol aircraft to monitor the Greenland-Iceland-UK (GIUK) gap, a chokepoint for Russian submarine activity.
The UK’s support is no accident. As a non-EU NATO member, Britain seeks to deepen bilateral defence ties outside the bloc’s cumbersome frameworks. Joint exercises like Joint Warrior and deployments of Royal Navy frigates to the Baltic have already demonstrated interoperability. Frederiksen’s government can be expected to endorse a permanent UK presence in the Danish airspace, potentially at Skrydstrup Air Base, to bolster air policing against Russian incursions.
However, the threat vector remains acute. Russia’s Zapad exercises have rehearsed landings on the Baltic islands of Bornholm and the Danish Straits. With Kaliningrad’s Iskander missiles capable of striking Copenhagen, air defence integration is paramount. The new government must prioritise the acquisition of the US-made MIM-104 Patriot systems, which face delays due to export bottlenecks. Furthermore, cyber defence remains a blind spot: the Danish Defence Intelligence Service warned last year of persistent attacks against defence suppliers, likely by GRU’s 85th Main Special Service Center.
The UK-Denmark partnership also extends to the Arctic. As Greenland gains autonomy, Copenhagen must balance sovereignty with US security guarantees under the 1951 Defence Agreement. The UK’s recent Arctic strategy, which emphasises high-readiness forces in Norway and Iceland, dovetails with Denmark’s need to monitor the Northeast Passage. Joint surveillance of Russian Bastion-P anti-ship missile systems on the Kola Peninsula will be a priority.
Yet, the real strategic pivot lies in logistics. Frederiksen has promised to establish a new logistics command to support reinforcements from the US and UK during crisis. This includes pre-positioning of heavy equipment in eastern Denmark, a move likely to provoke Russian protests under the INF Treaty framework. The government must also address the hollowing out of its army, which struggles to field more than one brigade. Conscription reforms are pending but face parliamentary opposition.
In conclusion, Frederiksen’s government is a necessary stabiliser, but it inherits a military in transition. The UK’s backing provides diplomatic cover but no panacea. The real test will be whether Copenhagen can translate political will into hardware contracts and integrated defence plans before the next crisis. The chessboard is set, and the opening move has been made.








