The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Side 15

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Side 15
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 13 NATO Conference in Reykjavik, JUNE 23-26, 1968 The NATO Ministerial Conference was held for the first time in Reykja- vik, June 23—26, Iceland being one of the 15 member-nations of NATO. An enormous amount of work is in- volved in preparing for these Con- ferences and great credit is due to all who participated. References to the splendid arrangements in Reykjavik were made again and again both on the platform and in informal discus- sions. On Sunday, June 23, a preliminary meeting was held by representatives of the press, presided over by Mr. Manlio Brosio of Italy, the Secretary-General of Nato. About fifty representatives of the press attended. Mr. Brosio wel- comed the press representatives and stated that after each conference meet- ing, which would be held in private, such information would be passed on to the press which the Conference was prepared to release. A question and answer period followed for about half an hour. The Conference itself was formally opened on Monday morning at 10 o'- clock in the University of Iceland main building. Dr. Bjami Benediktsson, the Prime Minister of Iceland, presided. Beside him to the right was Mr. Willy Brandt, Minister of Forgein Affairs of the Federal Republic of Germany, and to the left was Manlio Brosio the Secretary-General of NATO. Seated at a long table behind the three speakers were the representatives of the 15 member-nations and behind each one was the flag of his country on a fifteen-foot pole. In front of the stage and below them was a profusion of flowers. It all presented a spectacle of dignity worthy of the important oc- casion. In the course of his opening ad- dress Mr. Benediktsson said: “— — — Immediately following the War, we hoped that such security could be achieved through member- ship in the United Nations. Experience soon showed this to be a false hope, and as a result we became one of the signatory states of the North Atlantic Treaty. I considered it then—and still consider it today—a great personal honour to have signed the Treaty on behalf of my country. . . . ------As far as my own country is concerned we have entered into a special defence agreement with the United States, within the framework of the North Atlantic Treaty, but it depends entirely upon our own evalu- ation at the given time how long Am- erican troops remain in Iceland. And I want it to be clearly known that, in all the manifold relations which the Icelanders have had, for over a quarter- century now, with the Americans, over the defence of our country, they have never used the difference in strength which exists between the two coun- tries to their own advantage, even though they are the greatest power in the world and we one of the smallest, and utterly without the means to de- fend ourselves. Despite its overpower- ing strength the United Statse has al- ways, both in word and in deed, fully respected Iceland’s formal equality and sovereign rights. . . .” Mr. Benediktsson was followed by Willy Brandt who spoke with feeling

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