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Danish government challenged over missing Iraqi WMDs
By Niall Green
12 June 2003
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Denmarks Liberal Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen
recently paid a five-day visit to Washington where President George
W. Bush thanked him for Danish support during the attack and occupation
of Iraq. Denmark sent a small naval detachment to the Persian
Gulf during the conflict and is preparing to send 380 soldiers
to aid the occupying forces.
The trip comes amidst accusations that the Liberal-Conservative
Danish coalition used fabricated claims of Iraqi weapons of mass
destruction to generate support for the war. Rasmussen has insisted
that the war was justifiedwith or without the discovery
of prohibited weapons. There were several other good reasons
to launch the military action, he claimed.
Collaboration with terrorists was another reason. At
any rate, the world becomes a better place to live whenever a
dictatorial regime is removed. Thats justification in itself.
By contrast, Rasmussens Conservative Foreign Minister
Per Stig Møller maintains that the participation of Denmark
in the war was due to allegations by Britain and America that
Saddam Hussein had stockpiles of illegal weaponry.
Caught out by the mounting evidence that no such weapons exist,
the two leading Danish proponents of war seemingly find themselves
at odds with each other. But Møller criticisms are
simply aimed at covering over, post facto, the Danish governments
abject capitulation before the US.
A member of the European Union and NATO with strong economic
ties to Germany, Britain and the US, tiny Denmarks traditional
policy has been to balance between its more powerful allies. In
its strengthened orientation towards US imperialism during the
Iraq conflict, the Danish government abandoned this role. Fearing
that a confrontation with America would be disastrous for Danish
interests, while conflict with the Franco-German core of the EU
would be merely bruising, the government chose to side with Washington.
In the run-up to the United Nations Security Council vote on
the war, Thomas Donnelly, a senior Bush foreign policy advisor,
warned Denmark that it faced a diabolical choice.
Suggesting that the survival of NATO was at risk, Donnelly made
clear that it was the issue of Iraq that would dictate who were
the United States allies.
The US-dependent interests that the Rasmussen government sought
to protect included those of Danish-based multinational AP Møller
Group, the parent company of shipping giant Maersk. Registered
as a US company, Maersk signed a five-year $400 million deal with
the US Department of Defense earlier in the year to maintain and
operate eight Bob Hope-class military supply ships in the Indian
Ocean. A further 19 Maersk vessels are subsidised by the US Maritime
Security Program to the tune of $2.1 million per ship annually
to make them available for military supply tasks.
In addition to its direct dealings with the US military, AP
Møller Group has an oil and gas arm with interests in the
Persian Gulf region.
As a reward for Denmarks support, the American Embassy
in Copenhagen has indicated that Danish business will be given
a favourable position when bidding for Iraqi contracts. An Embassy
official said, Denmark took the lead in participating in
the coalition. Therefore, wed like to ensure that Danish
companies and other coalition partners have the opportunity to
participate in the rebuilding of Iraq.
Having attempted to secure the favour of Washington, Danish
efforts, led by the foreign minister, are now largely focused
on repairing the damage done to European relations. As part of
the reconciliation process Per Stig Møller has attempted
to give an impression of distance from the Bush administration.
He has disassociated the government from US sabre-rattling over
Syria, and has rebuffed US demands that Denmark agree to protect
Americans from prosecution under the International Criminal Court
in the Hague.
Møller will visit Berlin in July to hold talks with
his German counterpart Joschka Fischer. It is likely, however,
that the Danish government feels somewhat emboldened by the about-face
performed by Germany and France following their post facto acceptance
of the invasion and occupation at the UN. Denmark now seems to
be attempting to lecture its larger European neighbours on the
best way to accommodate to the reality of US aggression. A Danish
foreign office statement issued 6 June, calls for the EU to strengthen
its capacity to participate in international conflicts using its
own military means, with the European Security and Defence Policy
and the 60,000-man European rapid reaction force to be the basis
for a new era of European peacekeeping independent
of NATO and the US. But in this attempt to encourage a more robust
EU foreign policy, the Danish position remains that Europe must
avoid direct conflict with the US at all costs.
Speaking to a conference on the future of European integration
in May, Møller called for the EU to play the junior partner
to American imperialism. He urged the EU to develop not
as a counterweight to the United States of America ... but as
an independent and attractive player and partner for the US.
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