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Danish whistleblower charged after accusing prime minister
of exaggerating Iraqi WMD
By Niall Green
24 April 2004
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A former Danish intelligence officer, Major Frank Soeholm Grevil,
was charged on April 14 with breaching official secrecy rules
by leaking documents indicating that Prime Minister Anders Fogh
Rasmussen had exaggerated the existence of Iraqi weapons of mass
destruction. The Liberal-Conservative Danish government has been
one of Bushs staunchest allies in Europe over the invasion
and occupation of Iraq.
Major Grevil is accused of illegally passing on to the Berlingske
Tidende newspaper 10 reports that he himself had sent to the
prime minister in the run up to last years invasion. The
reports made clear that Iraq was unlikely to possess any WMDs.
The paper published the documents in February, after which
Denmarks military intelligence agency asked the police to
investigate the leaks. Two of the newspapers journalists,
Jesper Larsen and Michael Bjerre, have also been charged.
Grevil, who was fired from his job in March, said he leaked
the documents because the government had deliberately misinterpreted
the reports he had helped write. The major said that the intelligence
he had worked upon indicated that no reliable information
on operational weapons of mass destruction existed.
Grevil added that most of the Danish intelligence documents
were mainly a rewriting of the reports by US and British
spying agencies.
Rasmussen has denied Grevils claims, insisting that the
information he presented to the public corresponded to that received
from intelligence officials. Speaking to the Danish parliament
in the run-up to the war, after he had received Grevils
reports, the prime minister stated that he was convinced Iraq
was in possession of WMDs. This is not something we just
believe. We know, he said.
Since Iraqi WMD have proven to be nonexistent, Rasmussen has
sought to promote other justifications for the illegal and predatory
war. Currently the most favoured is that Denmark joined the US-led
coalition of the willing because Saddam Hussein did
not comply with United Nations resolutions after the 1991 Gulf
War. What decided us wasnt the WMD issue. This was
not the reason for our engagement. But Saddam Husseins lack
of cooperation with the (UN) Security Council was to have consequences
for him and led us to join the international coalition,
the prime minister claimed.
A spokesman for the opposition Socialist Peoples Party,
Villy Soendal, criticised the intelligence agencys move
to prosecute Grevil: The intelligence agency does not seek
to protect state security but apparently the credibility of the
head of government.
The opposition has also sought to increase its pressure on
Rasmussen, who manipulated or passed over information on
Saddam Husseins WMD threat to justify Denmarks
alliance with Washington, Soendal said.
Denmark has 500 troops deployed in Iraqs southern Basra
region under British command and contributed a small naval detachment
to the Persian Gulf during the invasion. It has also handed over
47 million euros to the US-promoted democracy and good governance
fund for Iraq.
The actions of the conservative newspaper Berlingske Tidende
in deciding to publish the leaked documents, and the harsh
response of the state in bringing charges against the paper and
Grevil, indicate growing tensions within the Danish elite over
the course of the countrys foreign policy.
The Berlingske Tidende has expressed the concerns of
those who would like to see Denmark adopt a position similar to
that taken by Spain under the new PSOE governmentre-orientating
away from Washingtons increasingly reckless policy and back
towards Paris and Berlin. They fear that continuing participation
in the increasingly bloody occupation of Iraq is too risky, not
least in terms of heightening anti-war feeling within the Danish
working class.
Rasmussens government has sought to allay these concerns
by maintaining that, as an interim Iraqi government is scheduled
to take over power on July 1, the country will be more stable
and the Iraqi authorities could sanction the presence of international
troops, including Danish soldiers, in the country.
In March Rasmussen claimed this hand-over would
create the possibility for a new start for US-EU relations.
This change will be significant for many of the countries
that were sceptical towards the war, and that have become more
and more involved in the development and the rebuilding of Iraq,
he said, referring to the possibility of France and Germany themselves
contributing to the occupation forces.
However, the escalation of the anti-occupation struggle in
Iraq and growing doubts regarding Rasmussens own credibility
has made the governments position even more difficult to
maintain. A recent poll for the Ritzau news agency found
57 percent of Danes in favour of an independent investigation
into the governments basis for backing the US-led war in
Iraq. The poll also found that whistleblower Grevil was viewed
as more credible than the prime minister, with 54 percent stating
that they doubted Rasmussens claims that his policy on Iraq
was honest.
See Also:
Spain: New prime minister says troops
to be withdrawn from Iraq
[20 April 2004]
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