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Whether the P-8 will attack submarines with on-board weaponry or just fall on it doing the 'Kamikaze-From-the-Sky Thing' is unknown.
Iceland has 26 diplomatic missions in 21 countries of the world. There are "honorary councils" - whatever that means - in 90 countries. Otherwise it uses its mission to the UN for all other needed international interactions. She believed in nothing; only her skepticism kept her from being an atheist. -- Jean-Paul Sartre
If it is a general consule they are salaried diplomats, as I understand it.
I am not exactly sure about these rules. Maybe they don't always have to be citizens of the appointing country?
US considered Cold War nuclear deployments in Iceland | Icelanf Monitor - 2016 | American officials conducted secret talks in the 1950s on storing nuclear weapons in Iceland without informing Icelandic authorities, it has emerged. According to recently declassified documents in the US National Security Archive, US government officials debated whether or not to deploy nuclear weapons in Iceland, "including through secret deployments". They were dissuaded from doing so by a letter from Tyler Thompson, then US ambassador to Iceland, who warned of the severe negative consequences of Iceland finding out about such action. The secret storage of nuclear weapons in Iceland could, Thompson feared, if discovered, lead to a "dramatic row" and Iceland's departure from NATO. Such revelations could "be expected to have an unfortunate effect on our friends and allies, to affect adversely our interests as far as neutrals are concerned, and to provide a propaganda field day for our enemies," Thompson writes. All references to `Iceland' are obscured in the documentation, but the context makes it clear that Iceland was the subject.
American officials conducted secret talks in the 1950s on storing nuclear weapons in Iceland without informing Icelandic authorities, it has emerged.
According to recently declassified documents in the US National Security Archive, US government officials debated whether or not to deploy nuclear weapons in Iceland, "including through secret deployments".
They were dissuaded from doing so by a letter from Tyler Thompson, then US ambassador to Iceland, who warned of the severe negative consequences of Iceland finding out about such action.
The secret storage of nuclear weapons in Iceland could, Thompson feared, if discovered, lead to a "dramatic row" and Iceland's departure from NATO.
Such revelations could "be expected to have an unfortunate effect on our friends and allies, to affect adversely our interests as far as neutrals are concerned, and to provide a propaganda field day for our enemies," Thompson writes.
All references to `Iceland' are obscured in the documentation, but the context makes it clear that Iceland was the subject.
○ The Crash, The Inuit, And The Bomb
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