Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.02.2005, Blaðsíða 15

Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.02.2005, Blaðsíða 15
Minister of Justice Björn Bjarnason reacted by saying, “I don’t intend to take part in this game that doesn’t make any difference.” The collapse of the Progressives As the controversy started to heat up, members of Ásgrímsson’s Progressive Party began to distance themselves from the Prime Minister, including Vice Chairman Guðni Ágústsson and former Minister of the Environment Siv Friðleifsdóttir. Support for the Progressive party, which was at 17.7% in the May 2003 elections, has plummeted to 8% as of February 1, according to a Fréttablaðið poll. The party’s national convention will be held at the end of this month. What will this mean for Ásgrímsson and his party? Are the Progressives splitting in two? “I think that the Prime Minister’s control over the Progressive party is pretty secure,” says Marshall. “I wouldn’t worry about him being ousted, but I do think he’s not having a very good time right now. It’s difficult to say what will happen - it appears that nothing will. But if they don’t clear this matter up, people will remember this in the long run. When you leave things unclear for this long, you give your opponents an opportunity.” Making a molehill out of a mountain Möller disagrees, saying, “There already have been repercussions. I wouldn’t say that this matter is off the table in Icelandic politics, but it’s certainly off to the side. If we think of a subject as a hill or a mountain, this subject is going downhill. It’s past now, and I think the Iraqi elections took the heat out of this matter for the whole world. Now is the time for all parties to focus on the reconstruction of Iraq.” So far, the only casualty of the Iraq controversy has been Marshall himself. After erroneously reporting that the decision for Iceland to support the US led invasion was made before March 18, 2003, Marshall resigned from his position as reporter for television station Stöð 2. Whether or not any resignations from politicians involved in this controversy are forthcoming remains to be seen. If anything is to be learned from this, it could be that the chance for the press, members of parliament, and the people themselves to question the decisions made by elected 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. From “Baghdad Burning,” http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com/ The United States has ended its physical search for weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq, which was cited by the first administration of President George W Bush as the main reason for invading the country, the White House has said. Why does this not surprise me? Does it surprise anyone? I always had the feeling that the only people who actually believed this war was about weapons of mass destruction were either paranoid Americans or deluded expatriate Iraqis- or a combination of both. I wonder now, after hundreds and hundreds of Americans actually died on Iraqi soil and over a hundred-thousand Iraqis are dead, how Americans view the current situation.” From “Healing Iraq,” http://healingiraq.blogspot.com ”One problem [in the Iraq elections] was the special ink that voters have to dab their fingers with. Many Iraqis were concerned that insurgents would catch them on their way back to Baghdad and recognise people who had voted. Some resourceful Iraqis had already devised several methods to get rid of the stain. One of these is to paint your fingers with skin lotion before you enter the polling station, wipe your finger clean immediately after voting and before the ink dries, on returning home dip your finger in boiling detergent and rub it repeatedly.” From “Free Iraq,” http://abutamam.blogspot.com/ “PS: “In the run-up to Iraq’s elections, the State Department’s spokesman this week ticked off the final markers of progress: 130 planeloads of voting materials had landed in Iraq, including 90,000 ballot boxes and 60 million ballots — a flurry of up to 15 flights a day to Iraqi airfields.” - MSNBC.com, January 29, 2005 There are about 25 million Iraqis, and about 15 million of them are elligible to vote (many are indeed boycotting it). What will they be doing with the extra 45 million ballots?” From “Dahr Jamail’s Iraq Dispatches,” http://dahrjamailiraq.com/weblog “Earlier today while I was in the al-Adhamiya district of Baghdad the US base there was mortared 8 times. We heard it just after finishing huge plates of kebabs at a sidewalk restaurant. After finishing the meal an old woman came to our table and asked if she could take our leftovers. He took two plastic bags and began dumping our half eaten salads and extra bread into them. She thanked us and blessed us, then began to shuffle off…Abu Talat and I both quickly walked over to her and gave her a small wad of Iraqi Dinars. We walked back to the car not saying a word about it.” From “My War,” http://cbftw.blogspot.com/ “So my AG looks over at me and with a mischievous smile says, “Watch this!” and then he starts chanting: “U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A!” over and over again, next thing you know all these little kids, 100’s of them, started chanting U-S-A!! Over and over again, each time a little louder. We were both laughing and thought this was all funny until I saw the reaction on the older people’s faces on the side of the road. They didn’t look too thrilled about that, once I immediately noticed that, I said, “Dude, that’s not cool! Make them stop yelling that shit!” But it was too late, these kids were having too much fun chanting U-S-A! Next thing you know I saw an older middle eastern lady wearing all black pick up a rock and throw it at us, which of course started a huge chain reaction of rock throwing at us. We got out of that neighborhood in a hurry after that. Lesson learned.” Baghdad Blogs An aid worker, three Iraqis, and a US soldier on the Net Planning your own incusion into the Middle East? Come on now - quit frontin’. You know you want it. But you best not go unprepared. After all, how are you gonna distinguish between peace-loving surrenderers and terroristic cockblockers out to burn you to death and hang your carcass from a bridge? Take a tip from the Pentagon and fly over your designated ass-kickin’ zone with these flyers that the US military dropped over Iraq before the invasion. For more samples, go to the link below. Clip and save! http://www.centcom.mil/galleries/ leaflets/showleaflets.asp officials should be taken quickly. This controversy could have been investigated thoroughly from the very start - instead, over a year went by before anyone took the matter seriously. Whether this issue will quietly disappear or result in consequences for those involved is anyone’s guess. However, as Róbert Marshall told us, “I don’t think it’s ever too late for the news to have an effect. Just look at Watergate. The break-in happened in 1972. Nixon was re-elected, and the Watergate story didn’t actually get him out of office until August 1974. Things like this can happen over time.” “If we think of a subject as a hill or a mountain, this subject is going downhill” - Ásta Möller, vice MP for Davíð Oddsson

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