When the Trump administration announced a sweeping new tariff policy this week, few expected it to include some of the most remote, uninhabited, and ecologically fragile places on Earth. But it did.
Among the dozens of countries and territories listed by the White House-affiliated “Rapid Response 47” account were two striking additions: Jan Mayen, an Arctic island home to polar bears and Norwegian scientists, and the Heard and McDonald Islands, uninhabited Antarctic territory known for their volcanic terrain and thriving penguin colonies.
Both locations have no exports to the United States. No trade volume. No meaningful role in global supply chains. And yet both are now subject to 10% import tariffs under the administration’s newly announced baseline rate.
The reasoning behind these selections remains a mystery.
WHEN SANCTIONS GO SOUTH
The Heard and McDonald Islands are legally part of Australia’s external territories. Uninhabited and accessible only by sea, they’re largely managed for environmental conservation. Their only residents are migratory seabirds, seals, and thousands of penguins. The Australian Antarctic Division did not respond to inquiries about how a U.S. tariff would apply to an island that has no economic interaction with the United States.
Norfolk Island, another Australian territory, was slapped with a 29% tariff, allegedly in retaliation for its “58% tariff rate” against the U.S.—a claim Norfolk officials flatly deny. “To my knowledge, we do not export anything to the United States,” said Norfolk’s administrator George Plant. “We’re scratching our heads here.”
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese put it more bluntly:
“I’m not quite sure that Norfolk Island is a trade competitor with the giant economy of the United States. But that just shows… nowhere on Earth is exempt from this.”
The inclusion of the Heard and McDonald Islands stretches that logic to its breaking point. Environmental groups quickly sounded the alarm, questioning why one of the planet’s most sensitive ecological zones—protected under multiple international agreements—would be flagged in a tariff rollout at all.
JAN MAYEN: THE POLAR FRONT
Farther north, Jan Mayen sits frozen in the Norwegian Arctic, a glacial island staffed only by personnel from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and military. It has no permanent population, no commercial port, and no exports. Yet it appears on the same tariff list as major trading nations like China and Germany.
Its presence on the list has sparked quiet speculation among foreign policy watchers, some of whom believe it may have less to do with trade and more to do with symbolism—or vengeance.
Rumors have long circulated around an incident known as the Greenland Futon Affair, in which Vice President JD Vance allegedly sustained injuries during a poorly planned solo expedition near the Arctic Circle. The trip reportedly involved an abandoned futon, a stash of raw seal meat hidden beneath it, and what insiders now believe was a trap — possibly laid by a rogue intelligence asset or an unhinged wilderness guide known only as “the Bastard.”
The unconfirmed theory suggests the meat was planted intentionally to draw in a polar bear, leading to Vance’s injuries. Official accounts of the incident are nonexistent. But Vance has made several strange comments in the months since, including cryptic references to “the apex predators,” “the betrayal in the snow,” and “the eyes behind the white.”
He has never publicly named the bear, or the bastard. But sources say his distrust of polar bears is now “entrenched.”
Whether these events played any role in Jan Mayen’s inclusion on the tariff list remains unverified. But it hasn’t stopped foreign diplomats from privately joking that the administration is waging a personal vendetta against the Arctic.
As one Scandinavian official quipped:
“It feels less like trade enforcement and more like someone lost a fight with nature and is now filing sanctions out of spite.”
WHAT DID THE PENGUINS DO?
The case of the penguins, meanwhile, is harder to explain.
The Heard and McDonald Islands aren’t strategic. They don’t house U.S. military assets, intelligence outposts, or natural resources of interest. The only thing they offer in abundance is untouched wildlife, including multiple species of penguins that breed along the island’s windswept shores.
Environmentalists fear that targeting such territories—even symbolically—could have ripple effects on global conservation efforts. “There’s no trade justification here,” said a spokesperson for the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition. “It sends a chilling message that even our most fragile ecosystems can be politicized.”
So why were the penguins dragged into this?
No one knows. There are no rumors of penguin-related incidents involving senior U.S. officials. No reports of damaged honor, furniture, or military mishaps involving flightless birds.
But in an administration known for mixing policy with personal vendettas, anything seems possible.
A CHILLING MESSAGE
The practical effect of these tariffs may be minimal. Most of the territories targeted—Jan Mayen, Heard and McDonald, Tokelau, Norfolk—have little or no trade with the United States. But the symbolism is profound: a warning that no patch of Earth is too remote, too harmless, or too ecologically sacred to be spared from geopolitical theater.
Whether this is the start of a broader campaign or merely another erratic flex of power, one thing is clear: the animals didn’t start this fight. But they’re somehow in it.
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This post has been syndicated from Closer to the Edge, where it was published under this address.