Finland: PM Resigns Over Use Of Classified Iraq Documents
By Jeremy Bransten, Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty
Controversy over the Iraq war has claimed its first head of
government -- but it wasn’t Britain’s Tony Blair or U.S. President
George W. Bush. Both face inquiries over whether the intelligence
used to justify the war was accurate or possibly even distorted.
Finnish Prime Minister Anneli Jaatteenmaki resigned yesterday after
being accused of lying to parliament over her use of classified
documents on Iraq.
Prague, 19 June 2003 (RFE/RL) -- The controversy over the
U.S.-led war in Iraq has claimed its first head of government.
Newly elected Finnish Prime Minister Anneli Jaatteenmaki, the
country's first female prime minister, announced her resignation
yesterday after being accused of lying to parliament over her use of
classified documents on Iraq. She had been in office just 63 days.
"I have announced to my party colleagues that it is impossible for
me to continue as prime minister. I will leave a letter of
resignation during this evening [18 June]," she said.
The crisis that led to Jaatteenmaki's abrupt resignation erupted
after a presidential aide, Martti Manninen, said the prime minister
-- during her election campaign -- had requested and obtained
confidential transcripts made by Finnish Foreign Ministry officials
during their discussions with U.S. officials in Washington on the
Iraq crisis.
Jaatteenmaki used information from those classified transcripts
to accuse her opponent in a television debate, incumbent Paavo
Lipponen, of siding with the United States, in defiance of Finland's
publicly declared neutrality. Many believe the accusation helped
Jaatteenmaki win the election.
But when doubts surfaced about how Jaatteenmaki obtained the
classified information, she denied having requested it, telling
parliament the incriminating transcript had been faxed to her office
unsolicited.
Martti Manninen, the presidential aide who forwarded the
transcripts, accused Jaatteenmaki of lying yesterday, saying he had
prepared the material at her specific request. With that,
Jaatteenmaki's fate was sealed.
Kari Huhta, foreign editor of "Helsingin Sanomat," Finland's
leading daily newspaper, tells RFE/RL from Helsinki that the
revelations have been a bombshell on the normally placid Finnish
political scene: "This is not a country of high political drama.
This is a fairly staid country as far as politics goes, much of the
time. And yesterday, when all of this unfolded in several phases
throughout the day, it was probably the most dramatic day in
Finland's history for a very, very long time."
And the damage may not stop there. The fact that the aide who
supplied Jaatteenmaki with the transcripts was a presidential
adviser has been a blow to Finnish President Taja Halonen, although
for now, her position appears secure: "It was a huge embarrassment
and it remains to be seen, as details unfold, but for the moment,
for all that's known, there is no implication that the president was
involved in any way and it's been vigorously denied by her office
that there would have been any knowledge on her part of what was
going on."
Manninen has since been dismissed and could face criminal
prosecution. Jaatteenmaki thus enters the history books having set
two records -- as her country's first woman prime minister and its
shortest-serving premier.
The ruling coalition, led by Jaatteenmaki's Center Party, is
expected to remain in power and settle on a new prime minister next
week. Observers expect Jaattenmaki's deputy within the Center Party,
Defense Minister Martti Vanhanen, to be her successor.
Copyright © 2003 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with
the permission of Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut
Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. http://www.rferl.org/
© 2003 TruthNews. All Rights Reserved.
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