Keep Us Strong WikiLeaks logo

Currently released so far... 97115 / 251,287

Articles

Browse latest releases

Browse by creation date

Browse by origin

A B C D F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z

Browse by tag

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
ETRD EAGR ETTC EAID ECON EFIN ECIN EINV ELAB EAIR ENRG EPET EWWT ECPS EIND EMIN ELTN EC ETMIN EUC EZ ET ELECTIONS ENVR EU EUN EG EINT ER ECONOMICS ES EMS ENIV EEB EN ECE ECOSOC EK ENVIRONMENT EFIS EI EWT ENGRD ECPSN EXIM EIAD ERIN ECPC EDEV ENGY ECTRD EPA ESTH ECCT EINVECON ENGR ERTD EUR EAP EWWC ELTD EL EXIMOPIC EXTERNAL ETRDEC ESCAP ECO EGAD ELNT ECONOMIC ENV ETRN EIAR EUMEM ENRGPARMOTRASENVKGHGPGOVECONTSPLEAID EREL ECOM ECONETRDEAGRJA ETCC ETRG ECONOMY EMED ETR ENERG EITC EFINOECD EURM EENG ERA EXPORT ENRD ECONEINVETRDEFINELABETRDKTDBPGOVOPIC EGEN EBRD EVIN ETRAD ECOWAS EFTA ECONETRDBESPAR EGOVSY EPIN EID ECONENRG EDRC ESENV ETT EB ENER ELTNSNAR ECHEVARRIA ETRC EPIT EDUC ESA EFI ENRGY ESCI EE EAIDXMXAXBXFFR EETC ECIP EIAID EIVN EBEXP ESTN EING EGOV ETRA EPETEIND ELAN ETRDGK EAIDRW ETRDEINVECINPGOVCS EPEC ENVI ELN EAG EPCS EPRT EPTED ETRB EUM EAIDS EFIC EFINECONEAIDUNGAGM EAIDAR ESF EIDN ELAM EDU EV EAIDAF ECN EDA EXBS EINTECPS ENRGTRGYETRDBEXPBTIOSZ EPREL EAC EINVEFIN ETA EAGER EINDIR ECA ECLAC ELAP EITI EUCOM ECONEFINETRDPGOVEAGRPTERKTFNKCRMEAID EARG ELDIN EINVKSCA ENNP EFINECONCS EFINTS ECCP ETC EAIRASECCASCID EINN ETRP EAIDNI EFQ ECOQKPKO EGPHUM EBUD ECONEINVEFINPGOVIZ ENERGY ELB EINDETRD EMI ECONEFIN EIB EURN ETRDEINVTINTCS EIN EFIM ETIO ELAINE EMN EATO EWTR EIPR EINVETC ETTD ETDR EIQ ECONCS EPPD ENRGIZ EISL ESPINOSA ELEC EAIG ESLCO EUREM ENTG ERD EINVECONSENVCSJA EEPET EUNCH ECINECONCS ETRO ETRDECONWTOCS ECUN EFND EPECO EAIRECONRP ERGR ETRDPGOV ECPN ENRGMO EPWR EET EAIS EAGRE EDUARDO EAGRRP EAIDPHUMPRELUG EICN ECONQH EVN EGHG ELBR EINF EAIDHO EENV ETEX ERNG ED
KMDR KPAO KPKO KJUS KCRM KGHG KFRD KWMN KDEM KTFN KHIV KGIC KIDE KSCA KNNP KHUM KIPR KSUM KISL KIRF KCOR KRCM KPAL KWBG KN KS KOMC KSEP KFLU KPWR KTIA KSEO KMPI KHLS KICC KSTH KMCA KVPR KPRM KE KU KZ KFLO KSAF KTIP KTEX KBCT KOCI KOLY KOR KAWC KACT KUNR KTDB KSTC KLIG KSKN KNN KCFE KCIP KGHA KHDP KPOW KUNC KDRL KV KPREL KCRS KPOL KRVC KRIM KGIT KWIR KT KIRC KOMO KRFD KUWAIT KG KFIN KSCI KTFIN KFTN KGOV KPRV KSAC KGIV KCRIM KPIR KSOC KBIO KW KGLB KMWN KPO KFSC KSEAO KSTCPL KSI KPRP KREC KFPC KUNH KCSA KMRS KNDP KR KICCPUR KPPAO KCSY KTBT KCIS KNEP KFRDCVISCMGTCASCKOCIASECPHUMSMIGEG KNNB KGCC KINR KPOP KMFO KENV KNAR KVIR KDRG KDMR KFCE KNAO KDEN KGCN KICA KIMMITT KMCC KLFU KMSG KSEC KUM KCUL KMNP KSMT KCOM KOMCSG KSPR KPMI KRAD KIND KCRP KAUST KWAWC KTER KCHG KRDP KPAS KITA KTSC KPAOPREL KWGB KIRP KJUST KMIG KLAB KTFR KSEI KSTT KAPO KSTS KLSO KWNN KPOA KHSA KNPP KPAONZ KBTS KWWW KY KJRE KPAOKMDRKE KCRCM KSCS KWMNCI KESO KWUN KPLS KIIP KEDEM KPAOY KRIF KGICKS KREF KTRD KFRDSOCIRO KTAO KJU KWMNPHUMPRELKPAOZW KEN KO KNEI KEMR KKIV KEAI KWAC KRCIM KWCI KFIU KWIC KCORR KOMS KNNO KPAI KBWG KTTB KTBD KTIALG KILS KFEM KTDM KESS KNUC KPA KOMCCO KCEM KRCS KWBGSY KNPPIS KNNPMNUC KWN KERG KLTN KALM KCCP KSUMPHUM KREL KGH KLIP KTLA KAWK KWMM KVRP KVRC KAID KSLG KDEMK KX KIF KNPR KCFC KFTFN KTFM KPDD KCERS KMOC KDEMAF KMEPI KEMS KDRM KEPREL KBTR KEDU KNP KIRL KNNR KMPT KISLPINR KTPN KA KJUSTH KPIN KDEV KTDD KAKA KFRP KWNM KTSD KINL KJUSKUNR KWWMN KECF KWBC KPRO KVBL KOM KFRDKIRFCVISCMGTKOCIASECPHUMSMIGEG KEDM KFLD KLPM KRGY KNNF KICR KIFR KM KWMNCS KAWS KLAP KPAK KDDG KCGC KID KNSD KMPF KPFO KDP KCMR KRMS KNPT KNNNP KTIAPARM KDTB KNUP KPGOV KNAP KNNC KUK KSRE KREISLER KIVP KQ KTIAEUN KPALAOIS KRM KISLAO KWM KFLOA
PHUM PINR PTER PGOV PREL PREF PL PM PHSA PE PARM PINS PK PUNE PO PALESTINIAN PU PBTS PROP PTBS POL POLI PA PGOVZI POLMIL POLITICAL PARTIES POLM PD POLITICS POLICY PAS PMIL PINT PNAT PV PKO PPOL PERSONS PING PBIO PH PETR PARMS PRES PCON PETERS PRELBR PT PLAB PP PAK PDEM PKPA PSOCI PF PLO PTERM PJUS PSOE PELOSI PROPERTY PGOVPREL PARP PRL PNIR PHUMKPAL PG PREZ PGIC PBOV PAO PKK PROV PHSAK PHUMPREL PROTECTION PGOVBL PSI PRELPK PGOVENRG PUM PRELKPKO PATTY PSOC PRIVATIZATION PRELSP PGOVEAIDUKNOSWGMHUCANLLHFRSPITNZ PMIG PREC PAIGH PROG PSHA PARK PETER POG PHUS PPREL PS PTERPREL PRELPGOV POV PKPO PGOVECON POUS PGOVPRELPHUMPREFSMIGELABEAIDKCRMKWMN PWBG PMAR PREM PAR PNR PRELPGOVEAIDECONEINVBEXPSCULOIIPBTIO PARMIR PGOVGM PHUH PARTM PN PRE PTE PY POLUN PPEL PDOV PGOVSOCI PIRF PGOVPM PBST PRELEVU PGOR PBTSRU PRM PRELKPAOIZ PGVO PERL PGOC PAGR PMIN PHUMR PVIP PPD PGV PRAM PINL PKPAL PTERE PGOF PINO PHAS PODC PRHUM PHUMA PREO PPA PEPFAR PGO PRGOV PAC PRESL PORG PKFK PEPR PRELP PREFA PNG PGOVPHUMKPAO PRELECON PINOCHET PFOR PGOVLO PHUMBA PRELC PREK PHUME PHJM POLINT PGOVPZ PGOVKCRM PGOVE PHALANAGE PARTY PECON PEACE PROCESS PLN PRELSW PAHO PEDRO PRELA PASS PPAO PGPV PNUM PCUL PGGV PSA PGOVSMIGKCRMKWMNPHUMCVISKFRDCA PGIV PRFE POGOV PEL PBT PAMQ PINF PSEPC POSTS PHUMPGOV PVOV PHSAPREL PROLIFERATION PENA PRELTBIOBA PIN PRELL PGOVPTER PHAM PHYTRP PTEL PTERPGOV PHARM PROTESTS PRELAF PKBL PRELKPAO PKNP PARMP PHUML PFOV PERM PUOS PRELGOV PHUMPTER PARAGRAPH PERURENA PBTSEWWT PCI PETROL PINSO PINSCE PQL PEREZ PBS

Browse by classification

Community resources

courage is contagious

Viewing cable 08REYKJAVIK263, ICELAND: CAN THIS COALITION BE SAVED?

If you are new to these pages, please read an introduction on the structure of a cable as well as how to discuss them with others. See also the FAQs

Understanding cables
Every cable message consists of three parts:
  • The top box shows each cables unique reference number, when and by whom it originally was sent, and what its initial classification was.
  • The middle box contains the header information that is associated with the cable. It includes information about the receiver(s) as well as a general subject.
  • The bottom box presents the body of the cable. The opening can contain a more specific subject, references to other cables (browse by origin to find them) or additional comment. This is followed by the main contents of the cable: a summary, a collection of specific topics and a comment section.
To understand the justification used for the classification of each cable, please use this WikiSource article as reference.

Discussing cables
If you find meaningful or important information in a cable, please link directly to its unique reference number. Linking to a specific paragraph in the body of a cable is also possible by copying the appropriate link (to be found at theparagraph symbol). Please mark messages for social networking services like Twitter with the hash tags #cablegate and a hash containing the reference ID e.g. #08REYKJAVIK263.
Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08REYKJAVIK263 2008-11-10 18:15 2011-01-13 05:37 CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN Embassy Reykjavik
VZCZCXRO7837
OO RUEHFL RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHROV RUEHSR
DE RUEHRK #0263/01 3151815
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 101815Z NOV 08
FM AMEMBASSY REYKJAVIK
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3881
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
RUEKDIA/DIA WASHDC
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 REYKJAVIK 000263 
 
SIPDIS 
 
NOFORN 
 
DEPT FOR EUR/NB 
DEFENSE FOR OSD/P (FENTON) 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/22/2017 
TAGS: PGOV PREL ECON EU IC
SUBJECT: ICELAND: CAN THIS COALITION BE SAVED? 
 
Classified By: Amb. Carol van Voorst for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d). 
 
1.  (C/NF) Summary:  Public support for Iceland's government has 
fallen below 50 percent in the wake of the financial crisis here, and 
cracks are beginning to widen between the two coalition parties as 
weekly demonstrations grow in size and fervor.  PM Haarde's 
Independence Party (IP) has taken the brunt of criticism for the 
failed economy, while Foreign Minister Gisladottir's Social 
Democratic Alliance is polling higher than its election results last 
year.  In the short term, a lack of viable (i.e., pro-EU) partners 
and Gisladottir's good relationship with Haarde will likely keep the 
FM from breaking up the coalition in the hope of new elections. 
However, Gisladottir has said publicly she is pushing within the 
cabinet for Iceland to explore EU membership, and polls show a 
majority of the public agree with her.  Securing a $6 billion package 
of IMF and bilateral financing will buy the government some time, but 
if Haarde cannot convince his party to go along with exploring EU 
membership we could see early elections called for the first time 
since the 1960s.  Some form of reshuffle is almost inevitable, 
however -- Haarde will not be able to answer the growing pro-EU group 
in his party without lots of blood on the floor and the rousting of 
several old IP chieftans (including the Minister of Justice and 
Central Bank Chairman David Oddsson).  End Summary. 
 
2.  (SBU) Following the economic disaster of October and the collapse 
of the country's banking sector, the government continues to take a 
beating in the polls.  Public support for the government fell to 46 
percent by the end of October, down 30 points from the beginning of 
the year.  While support for the Social Democratic Alliance (the 
junior coalition partner) has held steady or increased slightly, 
Prime Minister Haarde's Independence Party (IP) has been hammered. 
The IP, after nearly two continuous decades as Iceland's largest 
political party, is now third behind the SDA and the opposition 
Left-Greens, pulling only 22 percent in the polls.  The opposition 
parties and a growing portion of the electorate are now calling for 
elections before the current term ends in 2011.  A poll at the end of 
October showed 60 percent support for early elections, and the 
Chairman of the Left-Greens showed up at the Embassy's Election Night 
event gleefully working the room with that encouraging datum. 
Demonstrations calling for -- among other things -- a new government 
continue to grow, with the latest protest on November 8 drawing over 
3000 participants. 
 
3.  (C) That the public blames the IP specifically for the economic 
crisis is no coincidence -- the Prime Minister and Minister of 
Finance are both from the party, and the IP's 2007 campaign was based 
on the notion that only the Independence Party could be counted on to 
maintain Iceland's then-world-beating prosperity and quality of life. 
 More significantly, many domestic and international observers blame 
former PM and Grand Old Man of the Independence Party David Oddsson 
for Iceland's stunning loss of credibility in the financial world. 
Oddsson has served as the highly controversial Chairman of the 
Central Bank since 2005.  He made a number of ill-considered 
statements to the media early in the crisis, and many suspect it was 
at least partially due to his wounded pride that Iceland did not 
immediately seek IMF assistance.  Haarde's apparent inability to 
"control" or remove his predecessor as IP Chair has led many to blame 
the Independence Party for the continuing economic bad news. 
 
4.  (C/NF) Indeed, Haarde missed a key opportunity to gain political 
support by not replacing Oddsson early in the crisis.  Even among IP 
stalwarts, Oddsson's standing has never been lower, with the party's 
younger, more business-oriented members asserting to Emboffs and 
journalists that it was time for Oddsson --rabidly anti-EU membership 
for Iceland -- to finally exit the stage.  Only Haarde has the 
authority to replace the Central Bank Chair, and speculation around 
town is that the PM has not pulled the trigger thus far out of a deep 
sense of personal loyalty to his old mentor.  The result is that 
demonstrators now excoriate Haarde as well as Oddsson, the initial 
target of public ire.  While Oddsson remains in the picture, it will 
be almost impossible for Haarde to start his party and his country 
moving towards the EU. 
 
5.  (C) Other IP members, however, are proving much more open to EU 
membership, and are finding support from those who previously stayed 
out of the debate.  IP Vice Chair and Minister of Education 
Thorgerdur Katrin Gunnarsdottir, though cautioning that she was not 
making any sort of leadership challenge, said in a highly publicized 
late October interview that the her party had always pledged to take 
the most pragmatic stand on EU membership in terms of what was best 
for Iceland's interests.  Given that both the global and domestic 
economic situation has changed so dramatically in recent months, 
Gunnarsdottir continued, it is only logical that the IP reexamine its 
stand.  Bjarni Benediktsson, Chair of the Althingi Foreign Affairs 
 
REYKJAVIK 00000263  002 OF 002 
 
 
Committee, quickly echoed this argument.  PolOff has heard separately 
from IP sources that Benediktsson sees the party's old guard as 
standing in the way of not only serious consideration of EU 
membership for Iceland, but also Benediktsson's personal ambitions of 
a cabinet post. 
 
6.  (C/NF) Foreign Minister Gisladottir's Social Democratic Alliance 
(SDA), however, has become increasingly strident in its calls for 
serious exploration of EU membership as well as the dismissal of 
Central Bank Chair Oddsson.  Gisladottir said in a press interview 
that she is pressing Haarde for a new policy on the EU, and other SDA 
ministers have been equally active on this front.  However, to our 
knowledge, she has not made the leap to a push for early elections, 
though her party would be likely to benefit.  There may be a 
practical explanation here, as Gisladottir's recovery from brain 
surgery in September has kept her away from work for much of the 
tumultuous fall.  Some here also credit her personal relationship 
with the Prime Minister as a brake on a move to change the coalition. 
 The two party heads have developed an unexpectedly close and 
collaborative working relationship and clearly both like and respect 
each other. Gisladottir may view Haarde as a useful ally in the 
future should she be able to convince him to reexamine the EU 
question. 
 
7.  (C/NF) Most probable, however, is the explanation that 
Gisladottir simply does not see a viable alternative to the IP as a 
coalition partner at the moment.  The Progressive Party -- Iceland's 
only other pro-EU party -- has seen only marginal gains over the last 
month, and would in all likelihood still be too small to form a 
two-party coalition with the SDA.  The Liberal Party is even smaller, 
leaving only the Left-Green Movement.  Although the Left-Greens have 
polled significantly higher of late, they still do not endorse EU 
membership for Iceland.  Gisladottir seems unwilling to go into 
coalition with yet another party that is against joining the EU. 
However, as with the IP, the Left-Greens are locked in an internal 
struggle over their EU policy; the party's Vice Chair told PolOff 
over the summer that she was sympathetic to the growing pro-EU wing 
of the party and that she expected a reevaluation of the party's EU 
policy by the end of 2008.  This dynamic may be what FM Gisladottir 
meant in an interview when she said early elections would be a 
distraction to the government now, "but then a new year is coming, 
and people will have to assess the situation then." 
 
COMMENT 
------- 
 
8.  (C/NF) In the short term, the Icelandic Government desperately 
needs to finalize the $6 billion loan package with the IMF and other 
bilateral donors.  If the IMF loan fails to come through, the 
government will lose what little remaining credibility it has on the 
economic front and may very well find it impossible to stay on. 
Despite the protests and the speculation around town, however, we 
note that there is little tradition here of disgraced politicians or 
governments -- even those convicted of crimes -- resigning from their 
posts.  Early elections have not been invoked since the 1960s, and 
then only because a three-party coalition dissolved and no 
replacement could be created.  No-confidence votes are virtually 
unheard of. 
 
9.  (C/NF) If the IMF loan comes through, a likely scenario is that 
after the new year SDA Chair Gisladottir and a group led by IP Vice 
Chair Gunnarsdottir present the Prime Minister with their own 
ultimatums, both calling for a serious look at EU membership, and 
explicitly (SDA) or implicitly (IP) calling for Oddsson's removal. 
In any event, a cabinet reshuffle -- either to give the SDA more 
power over economic policymaking, to sweep out the IP old guard, or 
both -- seems inevitable once the fate of the IMF loan is clear. 
 
van Voorst