Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars

This study is about Norway’s policy during Iceland’s fishing disputes with Britain 1948–76. During this period, Iceland extended its fishing limit four times, from three to 200 nautical miles. Britain resisted every move and the two sides were embroiled in successive Cod Wars when the Royal Navy was...

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Main Author: Jóhannesson, Gudni Thorlacius
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Institutt for Forsvarsstudier 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/99545
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spelling ftforstvareshs:oai:fhs.brage.unit.no:11250/99545 2023-05-15T16:47:25+02:00 Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars Jóhannesson, Gudni Thorlacius 2005 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/99545 eng eng Institutt for Forsvarsstudier Forsvarsstudier;1 urn:issn:0333-3981 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/99545 148 s. Norge Island Storbritannia torskekrigen fiskerikonflikter Others 2005 ftforstvareshs 2022-06-30T16:10:46Z This study is about Norway’s policy during Iceland’s fishing disputes with Britain 1948–76. During this period, Iceland extended its fishing limit four times, from three to 200 nautical miles. Britain resisted every move and the two sides were embroiled in successive Cod Wars when the Royal Navy was sent to protect British trawlers from harassment by Icelandic coast guard vessels. At times the Icelanders seemed willing to leave NATO and expel the U.S. forces on the island. These events inevitably affected Norway. The Norwegian public sided with the tiny Icelanders and the strategic connotations of the Cod Wars worried the Norwegian authorities. During the Cold War, Iceland’s participation in the Western alliance system was always considered necessary for the defence of Norway. Thus, Norway’s national interests in the Cod Wars were not always clear, or they were conflicting. What should determine Norwegian policy, sympathy for Iceland or the self-interested defence of Norway’s own interests? Or was it perhaps possible to combine the two? Other/Unknown Material Iceland The Norwegian Defence University College: FHS Brage Norway
institution Open Polar
collection The Norwegian Defence University College: FHS Brage
op_collection_id ftforstvareshs
language English
topic Norge
Island
Storbritannia
torskekrigen
fiskerikonflikter
spellingShingle Norge
Island
Storbritannia
torskekrigen
fiskerikonflikter
Jóhannesson, Gudni Thorlacius
Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars
topic_facet Norge
Island
Storbritannia
torskekrigen
fiskerikonflikter
description This study is about Norway’s policy during Iceland’s fishing disputes with Britain 1948–76. During this period, Iceland extended its fishing limit four times, from three to 200 nautical miles. Britain resisted every move and the two sides were embroiled in successive Cod Wars when the Royal Navy was sent to protect British trawlers from harassment by Icelandic coast guard vessels. At times the Icelanders seemed willing to leave NATO and expel the U.S. forces on the island. These events inevitably affected Norway. The Norwegian public sided with the tiny Icelanders and the strategic connotations of the Cod Wars worried the Norwegian authorities. During the Cold War, Iceland’s participation in the Western alliance system was always considered necessary for the defence of Norway. Thus, Norway’s national interests in the Cod Wars were not always clear, or they were conflicting. What should determine Norwegian policy, sympathy for Iceland or the self-interested defence of Norway’s own interests? Or was it perhaps possible to combine the two?
format Other/Unknown Material
author Jóhannesson, Gudni Thorlacius
author_facet Jóhannesson, Gudni Thorlacius
author_sort Jóhannesson, Gudni Thorlacius
title Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars
title_short Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars
title_full Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars
title_fullStr Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars
title_full_unstemmed Sympathy and self-interest: Norway and the Anglo-Icelandic Cod wars
title_sort sympathy and self-interest: norway and the anglo-icelandic cod wars
publisher Institutt for Forsvarsstudier
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/99545
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source 148 s.
op_relation Forsvarsstudier;1
urn:issn:0333-3981
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/99545
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