Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.02.2005, Blaðsíða 14

Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.02.2005, Blaðsíða 14
only one problem: the nation itself was never asked. En route to Iraq US military planes had been landing in and flying over Iceland on their way to Iraq as early as February 19, 2003 as part of a routine agreement with the UN. But how Iceland became a member of the “coalition of the willing” is a matter still being debated. During meetings of the Foreign Affairs committee in the winter of 2002 to 2003, Iraq was only mentioned twice. On neither of these occasions was the possibility of supporting any military action against Iraq ever discussed. When member of parliament Þórunn Sveinbjarnardóttir asked Halldór Ásgrímsson on March 21, 2003 how Iceland ended up in the “coalition of the willing,” he responded by saying the decision was made after a meeting between officials in the Foreign Ministry and the Prime Minister’s office three days previous. In other words, the decision was made without consulting parliament. This should have been everyone’s cue - the opposition in parliament, the press, the people themselves - to jump up and demand answers. Instead, the issue was quietly forgotten for over a year and wouldn’t receive any serious attention until January 5, 2005, when the results of an IMG Gallup poll conducted the previous December revealed that 84% of those surveyed did not want Iceland to be a part of the coalition. Will the fervent, albeit very late, reaction now surfacing in parliament and in the media have any effect, or is the point moot? Morally supporting war Ásgrímsson, among others, has said that the Iraq question “was discussed many times in the Foreign Affairs committee and in parliament in the winter of 2002 to 2003.” Ásta Möller, vice MP for Davíð Oddsson, reiterated this same position to Grapevine: “There had been discussion about Iceland supporting the coalition forces before the invasion. Our part was political support, and to allow military aircraft to land in and fly over Iceland on their way to Iraq. We are a part of NATO, but as we don’t have any troops, ours was more of a moral support.” Iceland, although in the coalition, does not have an army. With no Icelander in danger of being killed in combat, any sacrifice made in supporting the war might not have seemed so great. After all, all we were doing was letting planes land and take off here, as they do all the time. No smoking gun President of the Journalist’s Union Róbert Marshall adds that the media bill brought before parliament in May of 2004 was also a contributing factor in keeping Iraq ignored: “The decision was made shortly before the elections in parliament. Then came the elections, and all the attention that the media bill received, which might partly explain why no one paid attention to the Iraq issue. But there had always been rumours going around. Things escalated when [MP in Ásgrímsson’s Progressive party] Kristinn Gunnarsson spoke up, saying Iraq was never discussed in parliament or in the Committee of Foreign Affairs, then another member spoke up, and the matter began to rear its head.” When asked why he felt the press didn’t react sooner, he said, “There were protests, statements made in newspapers, but I don’t think anyone realised the significance until much later. Now, when there are no weapons of mass destruction, it starts to look like something that it wasn’t necessary to get involved in. It was something I’d been thinking about for a long time, but we couldn’t see how we would get into the story; we didn’t know who would talk. The Progressives started talking on their own. If it wasn’t for them, we probably wouldn’t be talking about this now.” Media bill or war Hans Kristjánsson, chairman of the Movement for Active Democracy - an organization formed in response to the media bill which bought a full-page anti-war declaration in the New York Times - agrees: “When Ingibjörg Sólrún Gísladóttir ran for Prime Minister in 2003, she said the first thing she would do would be to get Iceland out of the coalition. But in a televised roundtable discussion the night before the elections, with members of the press and leading politicians all talking and debating various matters, the subject of Iraq never came up once. We began to focus more on the Iraq issue after the media bill controversy began to quiet down in July. We had always been discussing Iraq, but we didn’t want to split up our energy.” “Reactionary commie losers” On September 15, 2004, Oddsson and Ásgrímsson changed places; the former became Foreign Minister and the latter Prime Minister. Government policy remained unchanged. Then came the news on December 1, 2004 that the Movement for Active Democracy was raising money to buy a full page in the New York Times for their declaration entitled, “The invasion of Iraq – not in our name.” Suddenly, the issue reared its head again. Davíð Oddsson, in an address to parliament, showed uncharacteristic emotion when he said that the only people against Iceland’s support of the US led invasion of Iraq were “afturhaldskommatittir,” which loosely translates as “reactionary commie losers.” In January of 2005, with the results of the Gallup Poll made public, the Movement’s ad appearing in the New York Times that week, and more members of parliament - particularly from the Social Democratic and Leftist-Green parties - demanding answers. 3000 BCE: The city of Babylon arises in the region that is now Iraq. August 1920: British forces, having already taken over much of Iraq, struggle to seize control over Fallujah. In the ensuing battle, over 1000 British and Indian troops and around 10,000 Fallujans die. October 1932: Iraq becomes an independent state. June 1979: Saddam Hussein becomes Iraqi president through a coup d’etat. August 1990: Iraq invades Kuwait. Saddam Hussein would later say, in court, that he did this to control the price of oil. January 1991: UN Security Council passes Resolution 678, approving military action against Iraq. March 1991: Iraq accepts UN terms for cease-fire and UN sanctions are imposed. Official reports of Iraqi casualties are reported between 20,000 and 35,000. 1991 – 2003: As a result of sanctions and intermittent air attacks, anywhere between half a million and a million Iraqis die. September 2002: US President George W Bush, in an address to the UN, pushes for military action against Iraq. February 2003: US military aircraft on their way to Iraq stop in Iceland Feb 15: Day of global protest against war in Iraq, including hundreds of Icelanders, who march on parliament. March 18 2003: A statement of support for the US-lead invasion of Iraq from then Prime Minister Davíð Oddsson appears on the White House webpage. March 20 2003: US-lead military operations begin in Iraq, with Iceland listed as a member of “the coalition of the willing.” March 21 2003: Member of parliament Þórunn Sveinbjarnardóttir asks then- Foreign Minister Halldór Ásgrímsson how Iceland ended up in the coalition of the willing. His response is that this happened in a conversation between officials in the Foreign Ministry and officials of the President three days earlier. April 2003 – May 2004: Apart from several opinion pieces debating the pros and cons of supporting the US- lead war effort in Iraq, the media is largely silent on the Issue January 2004: Discovery of “mustard gas shells” by joint Icelandic-Danish team in southern Iraq turns out to be erroneous. June 2004: Movement for Active Democracy formed October 2004: Movement for Active Democracy calls for resignation of the ruling party or vote of no confidence January 5 2005: According to a Gallup poll conducted at the end of 2004, 84% of Icelanders do not want Iceland to be in the “coalition of the willing.” January 9 2005: Össur Skarphéðinsson, chairman of the Social Democratic party, says that both Foreign Minister Davíð Oddsson and Prime Minister Halldor Ásgrimmsson broke the law by signing Iceland into the coalition without bringing the question before the public or members of parliament. January 11 2005: IMG Gallup announces after a meeting yesterday that they stand by the results of the poll. Halldór Ásgrímsson, Davíð Oddsson and Minister of Justice Björn Bjarnason each respond to the poll by saying that it was vague and the questions unclear. January 13 2005: Halldór Ásgrímsson says on an interview on RÚV, “I am quite sure that Icelanders support developing democracy in Iraq, the elections there and the reconstruction which lies ahead.” January 20 2005: It comes to light that Iraq was only mentioned twice during meetings of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the winter of 2002 to 2003. At neither one of these meetings was the possibility of Iceland´s support for the war effort in Iraq ever discussed. January 21 2005: Pétur Gunnarsson, the office manager of the Progressive Party, offers his own explanation as to how Iceland ended up as one of the nations in the coalition that invaded Iraq, saying that Iceland was added by the US as a “public relations move.” January 22 2005: A full page statement from the Movement for Active Democracy appears in the New York Times yesterday entitled “The Invasion of Iraq – not in our name”. January 23 2005: Reuters erroneously reports that Iceland is no longer on any list of American allies of the war in Iraq. January 25 2005: Halldór Ásgrímsson admits on television station Stöð 2 that he allowed military aircraft on their way to Iraq to stopover in Keflavík in February 2003. January 26 2005: Jón Ásgeir Sigurðsson of “Spegillinn” confirms on radio station Rás 1 that after speaking with officials for the US State Department, the White House, and the National Security Advisor that Iceland is still in fact a part of the coalition of nations supporting the US- lead war effort in Iraq. Iceland is even still listed on the White House´s own webpage concerning the nations in this coalition. Today: Over 100,000 Iraqi civilians, half of whom are women and children, have died as a result of the invasion. Over 1600 coalition forces have lost their lives. Aid workers continue to be kidnapped and/or executed on a weekly basis. Iraq: A Timeline: “I don’t think anyone realised the significance until much later.” - President of Journalist’s Union Róbert Marshall Guðbjörg Sveinsdóttir, a psychiatric nurse, was invited to Baghdad in May 2003 by the International Red Cross (IRC) to evaluate the condition of mental health care in Iraq. During her time, she also visited Kurdistan and Basra. Ms. Sveinsdóttir shares her experieces in Iraq with Grapevine: “Like everything else in the country, the state of mental health servies in Iraq was chaotic. Saddam Hussein had officially denied the existence of mental health problems in Iraq, so the level of care was not very developed, to say the least. The IRC had one mental hospital in Baghdad staffed by a few local doctors. Resources were very limited and I don’t think they’ve improved. “The biggest mental health problems we were facing were post traumatic stress disorder and depression. The war, the sanctions, the looting, the escalating violence – all these things compounded made life pretty unbearable for many people. Of course, it wasn’t as bad then as it is now. “There were so many things I saw and experienced which impacted me deeply while I was there, especially the children. When the water system broke down in Baghdad, the streets were flodded with dirty water. Children were outside bathing in it. I saw people standing in very long lines waiting all day for food and gas. One thing I remember very clearly was when I was in the city of Kerbala, a very beautiful city. I talked to some of the American soldiers there. They were very young, very inexperienced and they didn’t have a clue about the culture. I spoke to many, and they all seemed very unprepared to be there. “But I’ll also never forget the tremendous strength a lot of Iraqi people showed. It was very moving. While most thought things would not be getting better any time soon, they did believe things would get better some day. They were just sick of being occupied, whether by Saddam or by the Americans. “If the IRC ever returns to Iraq, I think I would probably go back. My experience there was very tense, but it was also very remarkable.” Making Sense of the Chaos An Icelandic Nurse Recalls Her Time in Baghdad

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