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Open-source intelligence reveals a pattern: every time Trump threatens Greenland, operations at Canada’s northernmost military installation intensify. Yesterday’s flight is just the latest.
By Kevin J.S. Duska Jr. | January 14, 2026
On January 13, 2026, three days after President Donald Trump declared the United States would seize Greenland “whether they like it or not,” likely because of Greenland’s tremendous resources and the GIUK Gap, a Royal Canadian Air Force CC-130J Hercules quietly flew to Canada’s northernmost military installation as Denmark has been increasing its military presence in Greenland.
According to publicly available flight tracking data from FlightRadar24, RCAF aircraft tail number 130615 departed CFB Trenton, Ontario on January 12, staged through Iqaluit, Nunavut, and continued north on January 13. The return leg showed a flight time of 3 hours and 49 minutes, and the aircraft’s trajectory pointed to a destination 817 kilometers from the North Pole: Canadian Forces Station Alert.
On its face, nothing remarkable. The Canadian military regularly resupplies Alert, a tiny outpost on Ellesmere Island that serves as Canada’s Arctic sovereignty presence. Military transports fly north, deliver cargo and personnel, and return south. Routine operations.

Except for three details that make this flight worth examining:
To understand why a single military transport flight to a remote Arctic station matters, you need to understand what Alert is, what it can do, and what’s been quietly happening there since Trump first threatened Greenland.
The story is bigger than one flight.

Canadian Forces Station Alert sits at 82°30′ North latitude on the northeastern tip of Ellesmere Island. At roughly 57,000 square kilometers, Ellesmere is slightly larger than Croatia, with a human population of roughly 150 people scattered across three permanent settlements. Alert is the northernmost of these, and the northernmost permanently inhabited place on Earth.
But Alert is not a settlement in any traditional sense. According to official Canadian government sources, it’s a signals intelligence (SIGINT) intercept facility – a sophisticated listening post monitoring radio communications across Arctic and transpolar regions.
CFS Alert’s official mission, per official Canadian sources:
Translation: Alert intercepts, analyzes, and geolocates radio communications. Its extreme northern position provides unique advantages for monitoring signals across “the northern half of the globe,” according to Royal Canadian Air Force documentation.
Based on official DND sources and declassified technical documentation, Alert operates:
High-Frequency (HF) and Very High-Frequency (VHF) Antenna Arrays: Long-range signal interception systems capable of detecting communications hundreds to thousands of kilometers away. Multiple frequency bands allow monitoring of different communication types – military, commercial, maritime, aviation.
Direction-Finding Systems: Antenna arrays can determine the bearing and approximate location of radio transmitters through triangulation techniques. When coordinated with other SIGINT stations, this provides precise geolocation of emitters.
Remote Operations Architecture: Most intercepted signals are automatically collected and transmitted south via the High Arctic Data Communications System (HADCS) – a chain of microwave repeaters and satellite links connecting Alert to Communications Security Establishment (CSE) headquarters in Ottawa. Only about six operators remain on-site; the analysis happens elsewhere.
ECHELON Network Integration: Alert is part of the Five Eyes signals intelligence alliance linking the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Intelligence collected at Alert feeds into this shared system and is distributed to partner nations.
Alert’s position at 82°30’N provides several intelligence advantages:
Alert sits 680 kilometers from Thule Air Base (recently renamed Pituffik Space Base), the U.S. Space Force installation in northwest Greenland. To put this in perspective:
Alert is closer to the U.S. base at the center of Trump’s territorial ambitions than it is to most of Canada.
Thule, according to U.S. Space Force documentation, is the only military airfield in Greenland capable of supporting large-scale operations. It features a 10,000-foot runway that can handle strategic airlift aircraft, bombers, and heavy transports. Approximately 150 U.S. Space Force personnel are permanently stationed there, operating ballistic missile early warning systems and satellite control infrastructure. The base has a deep-water port (seasonal, ice-permitting) and extensive fuel storage and maintenance facilities.
Any U.S. military operation in Greenland – whether “the easy way or the hard way,” as Trump phrased it – would stage through Thule.
And Alert can monitor it.
Here’s what makes the January 13 flight more than routine: it’s part of a pattern that began when Trump first started threatening Greenland.
In May 2025, just weeks after Trump’s initial threats to acquire Greenland during his second term, something unusual happened at Alert: the Royal Air Force participated in Operation BOXTOP.

According to an official RAF press release dated May 7, 2025:
“Twelve members of No. 99 Squadron RAF have spent the past week in the Arctic Circle to help resupply the most northerly station on Earth. The RAF C-17 Globemaster aircrew and ground support crew have been working alongside their Canadian counterparts as they resupply Canadian Forces Station (CFS) Alert, more than 1,100 miles inside the Arctic Circle.”
The release explained that RAF aircrews were learning “how their allies from the Great White North conduct polar operations” and training in “landing on semi-prepared ice runways.”
The RAF press release noted this was “for the second year running” – meaning RAF participation began in 2024, when Trump was actively campaigning on acquiring Greenland.
RAF participation in Operation BOXTOP is not routine multinational cooperation. Here’s why:
Alert is a Canadian sovereign facility with a classified SIGINT mission. Canada doesn’t typically invite foreign militaries to train at intelligence installations. The official explanation – that RAF needed Arctic landing training – is thin. The UK has no Arctic territories requiring routine C-17 operations to ice runways.
The timing is too precise. RAF participation began in 2024 (Trump campaigns on Greenland acquisition), continued in May 2025 (Trump threatens Greenland as president), and now in January 2026 we see an out-of-cycle Canadian flight to Alert three days after Trump’s “whether they like it or not” statement.
C-17 Globemasters represent a capability upgrade. The RAF’s C-17s can carry significantly more cargo than Canada’s CC-130J Hercules. The May 2025 operation delivered “nearly two million litres of jet fuel” according to the RAF release. This isn’t routine resupply – it’s capacity building, pre-positioning massive fuel reserves that would support intensified operations.
UK is developing independent Alert access. By training RAF crews on Arctic operations and Alert’s runway, the UK is building the capability to reach Alert independently of Canadian airlift. This suggests Alert is being positioned as a facility that Five Eyes partners can access directly.
The pattern reveals Alert is being transformed from a Canadian national SIGINT facility into something more significant: a multinational Arctic intelligence hub specifically positioned to monitor and respond to U.S. activity in Greenland.
This didn’t happen accidentally. This is NATO – or at minimum, the Five Eyes intelligence alliance – quietly positioning assets to maintain independent monitoring capability of Thule while Trump threatens Denmark.
Alert’s role in the Greenland crisis exposes a fundamental tension in Western intelligence architecture.
Alert is part of the ECHELON network – the Five Eyes SIGINT alliance between the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Under this agreement, the five nations share intercepted communications and, theoretically, do not spy on each other’s governments.
But Denmark is not part of Five Eyes. Denmark is a NATO ally and hosts a major U.S. military installation on its territory (Thule), but it has no access to Five Eyes intelligence sharing.
This creates an intelligence gap that becomes critical during the current crisis:
Denmark cannot independently monitor U.S. military activity at Thule. It’s Danish territory, but U.S.-operated. Denmark has no signals intelligence infrastructure capable of monitoring the base. Denmark’s entire active military is roughly 21,000 personnel – smaller than the New York Police Department, as Trump noted. Denmark lacks the technical capabilities for sophisticated SIGINT operations.
The U.S. intelligence community is unlikely to share operational planning for potential military action against Denmark. Even within Five Eyes, compartmentalization limits what’s shared. If the U.S. is planning operations Denmark would oppose, those plans stay classified.
Other NATO allies lack Arctic monitoring capability. European NATO members have no installations positioned to monitor Thule. They’re dependent on what the U.S. chooses to share.
Only Canada has independent monitoring capability – geographic proximity, established infrastructure, technical systems, and operational experience in the Arctic environment.
This makes Canada uniquely valuable to Denmark and to NATO during this crisis. Canada can provide intelligence that no one else can: independent verification of U.S. military activity at Thule.

Here’s where it gets complicated.
If Alert monitors increased U.S. military activity at Thule – heightened communications, additional flights, operational preparations – Canada faces a choice:
The evidence suggests Canada is pursuing some combination of options 2 and 3. The RAF’s operational integration into Alert operations indicates intelligence coordination with the UK. And Canada’s direct diplomatic engagement with Denmark (Anand’s January 11 call) suggests intelligence sharing is likely happening through those channels.

Based on standard signals intelligence collection practices and Alert’s documented capabilities, here’s what the station could detect regarding Thule:
Even without decrypting content, monitoring the amount of communication provides intelligence value:
Radio communications associated with aircraft operations provide indicators:
Approach/Departure Communications: Aircraft communicating with Thule tower on approach and departure frequencies provide real-time tracking of flight operations.
Aircraft Types: Different aircraft have different radio signatures. Strategic airlift (C-5 Galaxy, C-17 Globemaster), tankers (KC-135, KC-46), fighters, and special operations aircraft all have distinct communication patterns.
Flight Frequency: Establishing baseline aircraft movements allows detection of surge operations – multiple flights per day, continuous operations, or deployment of unusual aircraft types.
Changes in how communications are conducted provide intelligence:
Important limitations:
Modern military encryption is unbreakable in real-time. U.S. military communications use sophisticated encryption systems. Alert cannot decrypt content of classified military communications.
Fiber-optic and satellite communications may not be detectable. Alert primarily monitors radio-frequency communications. Hardline communications or certain satellite links might not be interceptible.
Single observation point limits triangulation accuracy. While Alert can detect signals and determine general bearing, precise geolocation often requires multiple monitoring stations.
Even without decryption, Alert can assess:
For strategic warning and intelligence assessment, this is sufficient. Canada doesn’t need to read U.S. military communications to know if Thule is preparing for large-scale operations.
Based on standard military intelligence operations and Arctic warfare doctrine, here’s how Alert’s mission would likely evolve during the Greenland crisis:
Normal operations:
When Trump began Greenland rhetoric:
Trump threats intensify:
Trump declares “whether they like it or not”:
The January 13 flight likely represents Phase 4 activity – crisis response outside normal schedules.
In the current Greenland crisis, Canada occupies a position no other nation can replicate:
Alert is the closest non-Greenlandic military installation to Thule. No other NATO member has comparable access.
Decades of Arctic SIGINT operations provide unmatched institutional knowledge and infrastructure.
Canada is:
Canada can:
Denmark’s dilemma is acute:
Denmark needs Canada’s intelligence to understand U.S. military posture at Thule.
If the U.S. takes military action against Greenland, NATO faces an unprecedented scenario: one member potentially attacking another member’s territory. Article 5 – collective defense – would technically apply, but defending Denmark against the United States would shatter the alliance.
NATO requires:
Alert provides all three. This makes Canada’s intelligence capability indispensable to NATO’s response.
The January 13 flight occurred within a week of intense diplomatic activity:
Canada’s actions span diplomatic, intelligence, and strategic domains – a coordinated response treating Trump’s threats as credible.
Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) can monitor several indicators of Alert’s evolving role:
Watch for:
Monitor for:
Track:
Look for:
The January 13 RCAF flight to Alert, viewed in isolation, could be routine. An out-of-cycle resupply, a personnel rotation, an equipment delivery – all plausible explanations.
But viewed as part of a pattern that began in 2024 when Trump first threatened Greenland, the flight takes on different meaning:
This is not coincidence. This is a coordinated NATO/Five Eyes response positioning Alert as an independent intelligence facility for monitoring U.S. activity in Greenland.
Alert provides something no other nation can: independent verification of what’s actually happening at Thule, the base that would stage any U.S. military operation in Greenland.
That capability makes Canada indispensable to NATO’s response. Denmark needs Canada’s intelligence because Denmark cannot monitor Thule themselves. European NATO members need Canada’s intelligence because they have no Arctic assets. The alliance needs Canada’s intelligence because decisions about responding to potential U.S. action against Denmark must be based on facts, not assumptions.
The January 13 flight represents Canada maintaining – and possibly enhancing – that capability during a week of crisis. Whether it delivered additional monitoring equipment, specialist personnel, or simply maintained routine operations, the message is clear: Canada is ensuring Alert remains operational and capable during the most serious NATO crisis since the alliance’s founding in 1949.
In intelligence work, being ready matters more than being used. Alert may never need to provide warning of U.S. military action against Greenland. The crisis may resolve diplomatically. Trump may back down.
But if he doesn’t, NATO will need to know what’s actually happening at Thule. And Alert is the only place that can provide that information independently.
That’s why yesterday’s flight matters.
And that’s why, as long as Trump threatens Greenland, we should expect to see more flights to Alert – whether BOXTOP season or not.
This analysis relies exclusively on open-source intelligence (OSINT):