Designated Competent Authority(ies):
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Contact details:
| Address: |
Ministry of Foreign Affairs Legalisation Office Asiatisk Plads 2 B 1448 Copenhagen K Denmark |
| Telephone: |
+45 33 92 12 33 |
| Fax: |
+45 33 92 01 38 |
| E-mail: |
legalisering@um.dk |
| Contact person: |
- |
| General website (see also "Practical Information"): |
www.um.dk |
Practical Information:
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Denmark

Geography*
Area: 43,094 sq. km. (16,639 sq. mi.); slightly smaller than Vermont and New Hampshire combined.
Cities: Capital--Copenhagen (pop. 0.5 million in Copenhagen and 1.1 million in the Copenhagen Region). Other cities--Arhus (293,510), Odense (185,206), Aalborg (163,231).
Terrain: Low and flat or slightly rolling; highest elevation is 173 m. (568 ft.).
Climate: Temperate. The terrain, location, and prevailing westerly winds make the weather changeable.
*Excluding Greenland and the Faroe Islands
People
Nationality: Noun--Dane(s). Adjective--Danish.
Population (Dec. 2007): 5,475,791.
Annual growth rate (Dec. 2006-Dec. 2007): 0.53%.
Ethnic groups: Scandinavian, Inuit, Faroese, German, Turkish, Iranian, Somali.
Religion membership: Evangelical Lutheran 95%; other Protestant denominations and Roman Catholics 3%; Muslim 2%.
Languages: Danish, Faroese, Greenlandic (Inuit dialect), some German. English is the predominant second language.
Education: Years compulsory--9. Attendance--100%. Literacy--100%.
Health: Infant mortality rate (2006)--4.4/1,000. Life expectancy--men 75.9 years, women 80.5 years.
Work force (2007): 2.9 million. Employment: Industry, construction, and utilities--23%; government--38%; private services--37%; agriculture and fisheries--2%.
Government
Type: Constitutional monarchy.
Constitution: June 5, 1953.
Branches: Executive--queen (chief of state), prime minister (head of government), cabinet. Legislative--unicameral parliament (Folketing). Judicial--appointed Supreme Court.
Political
parties (represented in parliament): Venstre (Liberal), Social
Democratic, Konservative, Socialist People's, Social Liberal, Unity
List, Danish People's, New Alliance.
Suffrage: Universal adult (18 years of age).
Administrative subdivisions: 5 regions and 98 municipalities.
Economy
GDP (2006): $311.5 billion (current prices and exchange rates, source: OECD).
Annual growth rate (real terms, 2007 est.): 1.8%.
Per capita GDP: $56,895 (current prices and exchange rates).
Agriculture and fisheries (1.3% of GDP at gross value added): Products--meat, milk, grains, seeds, hides, fur skin, fish and shellfish.
Industry (20.0% of GDP at gross value added): Types--industrial
and construction equipment, food processing, electronics, chemicals,
pharmaceuticals, furniture, textiles, windmills, and ships.
Natural resources: North Sea--oil and gas, fish. Greenland--fish and shrimp, potential for hydrocarbons and minerals, including zinc, lead, molybdenum, uranium, gold, platinum. The Faroe Islands--fish, potential for hydrocarbons.
Trade (2007, goods): Exports--$101.885
billion: manufactured goods 75% (of which machinery and instruments
were 35%); agricultural products 9% (of which pork and pork products
cover 48%); fuels, etc. 10%; fish and fish products 1%; other 5%. Imports--$98.861
billion: raw materials and semi-manufactures 44%; consumer goods 30%;
capital equipment 12%; transport equipment 7%; fuels 5%; other 1%. Partners (percent of total trade in goods)--Germany 17%, Sweden 15%, U.K. 8%, Norway 6%, U.S. 5%.
Official exchange rate: 4.71 kroner=U.S. $1 as of end March 2008.
PEOPLE AND HISTORY
The
Danes, a homogenous Gothic-Germanic people, have inhabited Denmark
since prehistoric times. Danish is the principal language. English is a
required school subject, and fluency is high. A small German-speaking
minority lives in southern Jutland; a mostly Inuit population inhabits
Greenland; and the Faroe Islands have a Nordic population with its own
language. Education is compulsory from ages seven to 16 and is free
through the university level.
Although religious freedom
is guaranteed, the state-supported Evangelical Lutheran Church accounts
for about 95% of those persons claiming religious affiliation. Several
other Christian denominations, as well as other major religions, find
adherents in Denmark. Islam is now the second-largest religion in
Denmark.
During the Viking period
(9th-11th centuries), Denmark was a great power based on the Jutland
Peninsula, the Island of Zealand, and the southern part of what is now
Sweden. In the early 11th century, King Canute united Denmark and
England for almost 30 years.
Viking raids brought
Denmark into contact with Christianity, and in the 12th century, crown
and church influence increased. By the late 13th century, royal power
had waned, and the nobility forced the king to grant a charter,
considered Denmark's first constitution. Although the struggle between
crown and nobility continued into the 14th century, Queen Margrethe I
succeeded in uniting Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, the Faroe
Islands, Iceland, and Greenland under the Danish crown. Sweden and
Finland left the union in 1520; however, Norway remained until 1814.
Iceland, in a "personal union" under the king of Denmark after 1918,
became independent in 1944.
The Reformation was
introduced in Denmark in 1536. Denmark's provinces in today's
southwestern Sweden were lost in 1658, and Norway was transferred from
the Danish to the Swedish crown in 1814, following the defeat of
Napoleon, with whom Denmark was allied.
The Danish liberal movement
gained momentum in the 1830s, and in 1849 Denmark became a
constitutional monarchy. After the war with Prussia and Austria in
1864, Denmark was forced to cede Schleswig-Holstein to Prussia and
adopt a policy of neutrality. Toward the end of the 19th century,
Denmark inaugurated important social and labor market reforms, laying
the basis for the present welfare state.
Denmark remained neutral
during World War I. Despite its declaration of neutrality at the
beginning of World War II, it was invaded by the Germans in 1940 and
occupied until liberated by the Allied forces in May 1945. Resistance
against the Germans was sporadic until late 1943. By then better
organized, the resistance movement and other volunteers undertook a
successful rescue mission in which nearly the entire Jewish population
of Denmark was shipped to Sweden (whose neutrality was honored by
Germany). However, extensive studies are still being undertaken for the
purpose of establishing a clearer picture of the degree of Danish
cooperation--official and corporate--with the occupying power. Denmark
became a charter member of the United Nations and was one of the
original signers of the North Atlantic Treaty.
Cultural Achievements
Denmark's
rich intellectual heritage has made multifaceted contributions to
modern culture the world over. The discoveries of astronomer Tycho
Brahe (1546-1601), geologist and anatomist Niels Steensen (1639-86),
and the brilliant contributions of Nobel laureates Niels Bohr
(1885-1962) to atomic physics and Niels Finsen (1860-1904) to medical
research indicate the range of Danish scientific achievement. The fairy
tales of Hans Christian Andersen (1805-75), the philosophical essays of
Soeren Kierkegaard (1813-55), and the short stories of Karen Blixen
(pseudonym Isak Dinesen; 1885-1962) have earned international
recognition, as have the symphonies of Carl Nielsen (1865-1931). Danish
applied art and industrial design have won so many awards for
excellence that the term "Danish Design" has become synonymous with
high quality, craftsmanship, and functionalism. Among the leading
lights of architecture and design was Arne Jacobsen (1902-1971), the
"father of modern Danish design." The name of Georg Jensen (1866-1935)
is known worldwide for outstanding modern design in silver, and "Royal
Copenhagen" is among the finest porcelains. No 'short list' of famous
Danes would be complete without the entertainer and pianist Victor
Borge (1909-2000), who emigrated to the United States under Nazi threat
in 1940, and had a worldwide following when he died a naturalized U.S.
citizen in Greenwich, Connecticut, at the age of 91.
Visitors to Denmark will
discover a wealth of cultural activity. The Royal Danish Ballet
specializes in the work of the great Danish choreographer August
Bournonville (1805-79). Danish dancers also feature regularly on the
U.S. ballet scene, notably Peter Martins as head of New York City
Ballet.
The Danish Film Institute,
one of the oldest in Scandinavia, offers daily public screenings of
Danish and international movies in their original language and plays an
active role in the maintenance and restoration of important archival
prints. Over the decades, movie directors like Gabriel Axel (Babette's
Feast, 1987 Oscar for Best Foreign Film), Bille August (Buster's World,
1984; Pelle the Conqueror, 1988 Oscar for Best Foreign Film; The House
of the Spirits, 1993) and Lars von Trier (Breaking the Waves, 1996;
Dancer in the Dark, 2000 Cannes Golden Palm) have all won international
acclaim. In addition, Denmark has been involved virtually from the
start in development of the "Dogma film" genre, where small, hand-held
digital cameras have permitted greater rapport between director and
actor and given a documentary film feel to their increasingly realistic
works. Besides von Trier's Dogville (2003) starring Nicole Kidman, and
The Idiots (1998), The Celebration (1998 Cannes Special Jury prize) by
Thomas Vinterberg, Mifune's Last Song (1999 Berlin Silver Bear award)
by Soeren Kragh-Jacobsen, and Italian for Beginners (2000 Berlin Silver
Bear award) by Lone Scherfig all are prime examples of the Dogma
concept.
International collections
of modern art enjoy unusually attractive settings at the Louisiana
Museum north of Copenhagen, "Arken" south of Copenhagen, and the North
Jutland Art Museum in Aalborg. The State Museum of Art and the
Glyptotek, both in Copenhagen, contain masterpieces of Danish and
international art. Denmark's National Museum building in central
Copenhagen harbors most of the state's anthropological and
archeological treasures with especially fine prehistoric and Viking Age
collections; two of its finest satellite collections are the Viking
Ship Museum in Roskilde west of the metropolis and the Open Air Museum
in a near northern suburb where original buildings have been
transported from their original locations around the country and
reassembled on plots specially landscaped to evoke the original site.
The Museum of Applied Art and Industrial Design in Copenhagen exhibits
the best in Danish design. The world-renowned Royal Copenhagen
Porcelain Factory exports worldwide. The ceramic tradition is carried
on by designers such as Bjoern Wiinblad, whose whimsical creations
remain as popular today as when they burst on the scene in the 1950s,
and is carried on by younger talents such as Gertrude Vasegaard and
Michael Geertsen.
Denmark has more than its
share of impressive castles, many of which have been converted to
museums. Frederiksborg Castle, on a manmade island in a lake north of
Copenhagen, was restored after a catastrophic fire in the 1800s and now
houses important collections in awe-inspiring splendor amidst
impeccably manicured gardens. In Elsinore, Kronborg (or Hamlet's)
Castle that once exacted tribute from passing ships now houses
important furniture and art collections of the period, while hosting in
its courtyard many touring summer productions of Shakespearean works.
In Copenhagen, Rosenborg Castle houses the kingdom's crown jewels and
boasts spectacular public gardens in the heart of the city.
Among today's Danish
writers, probably the best-known to American readers is Peter Hoeg
(Smilla's Sense of Snow; Borderliners), while the most prolific is
Klaus Rifbjerg--poet, novelist, playwright, and screenwriter. Benny
Andersen writes poems, short stories, and music. Poems by both writers
have been translated into English by the Curbstone Press. Suzanne
Broegger focuses on the changing roles of women in society. Kirsten
Thorup's "Baby" won the 1980 Pegasus Prize and is printed in English by
the University of Louisiana Press. The psychological thrillers of
Anders Bodelsen and political thrillers by Leif Davidsen also appear in
English.
In music, Hans Abrahamsen
and Per Noergaard are the two most famous living composers.
Abrahamsen's works have been performed by the National Symphony
Orchestra in Washington, DC. Other international names are Poul Ruders,
Bo Holten, and Karl Aage Rasmussen. Danes such as bass player Niels
Henning Oersted Petersen have won broad international recognition, and
the Copenhagen Jazz Festival held each year in July has acquired a firm
place on the calendar of international jazz enthusiasts.
Cultural Policy
The
Ministry of Cultural Affairs was created in 1961. Cultural life and
meaningful leisure time were then and remain now subjects of debate by
politicians and parliament as well as the general public. The
democratization of cultural life promoted by the government's 1960s
cultural policy recently has come to terms with the older "genteel
culture;" broader concepts of culture now generally accepted include
amateur and professional cultural, media, sports, and leisure-time
activities.
Denmark's cultural policy
is characterized by decentralized funding, program responsibility, and
institutions. Danish cultural direction differs from that of other
countries with a Ministry of Culture and a stated policy in that
special laws govern each cultural field--e.g., the Theater Act of 1990
(as amended) and the Music Law of 1976 (as amended).
The Ministry of Cultural
Affairs includes among its responsibilities international cultural
relations; training of librarians and architects; copyright
legislation; and subsidies to archives, libraries, museums, literature,
music, arts and crafts, theater, and film production. During 1970-82,
the Ministry also recognized protest movements and street
manifestations as cultural events, because social change was viewed as
an important goal of Danish cultural policy. Different governments
exercise caution in moderating this policy and practice. Radio and TV
broadcasting also fall under the Ministry of Culture.
Although government
expenditures for culture totaled about 1.0% of the budget in 1996, in
2006 government expenditures for culture totaled 0.66% of gross
domestic product (GDP). Viewed against the new government's firm
objective to limit public expenditures, contributions are unlikely to
increase in the future. Municipal and county governments assume a
relatively large share of the costs for cultural activities in their
respective districts. Most support goes to libraries and archives,
theater, museums, arts and crafts training, and films.
GOVERNMENT
Denmark
is a constitutional monarchy. Queen Margrethe II has largely ceremonial
functions; probably her most significant formal power lies in her right
to appoint the prime minister and cabinet ministers, who are
responsible for administration of the government. However, she must
consult with parliamentary leaders to determine the public's will,
since the cabinet may be dismissed by a vote of no confidence in the Folketing (parliament). Cabinet members are occasionally recruited from outside the Folketing.
The 1953 constitution established a unicameral Folketing
of not more than 179 members, of whom two are elected from the Faroe
Islands and two from Greenland. Elections are held at least every 4
years, but the prime minister can dissolve the Folketing at any time and call for new elections. Folketing
members are elected by a complicated system of proportional
representation; any party receiving at least 2% of the total national
vote receives representation. The result is a multiplicity of parties
(eight represented in the Folketing after the November 2007 general election), none of which holds a majority. Electorate participation normally is around 80-85%.
The judicial branch consists
of 22 local courts, two high courts, several special courts (e.g.,
arbitration and maritime), and a Supreme Court of 15 judges appointed
by the crown on the government's recommendation.
Since a structural reform
of local government was passed by the Folketing in 2004 and 2005,
Denmark has been divided into five regions and 98 municipalities. The
regions and municipalities are both led by councils elected every four
years, but only the municipal councils have the power to levy taxes.
Regional councils are responsible for health services and regional
development, while the municipal councils are responsible for day care,
elementary schools, care for the elderly, culture, environment and
roads.
The Faroe Islands and
Greenland enjoy home rule, with the Danish Government represented
locally by high commissioners. These home rule governments are
responsible for most domestic affairs, with foreign relations, monetary
affairs, and defense falling to the Danish Government.
Principal Government Officials
Monarch--Queen Margrethe II
Prime Minister--Anders Fogh Rasmussen
Ministers
Economic and Business Affairs--Bendt Bendtsen
Foreign Affairs--Per Stig Moeller
Finance--Lars Loekke Rasmussen
Employment--Claus Hjort Frederiksen
Justice--Lene Espersen
Culture--Brian Mikkelsen
Refugees, Immigration and Integration Affairs and Ecclesiastical Affairs--Birthe R. Hornbech
Development Cooperation--Ulla Tornaes
Taxation--Kristian Jensen
Transport--Carina Christensen
Science, Technology and Innovation--Helge Sander
Food, Agriculture and Fisheries--Eva Kjer Hansen
Defense--Soren Gade
Climate and Energy--Connie Hedegaard
Health and Prevention--Jakob Axel Nielsen
Education--Bertel Haarder
Welfare and Gender Equality--Karen Jespersen
Environment--Troels Lund Poulsen
Ambassador to the United States--Friis Arne Petersen
Ambassador to the United Nations--Carsten Staur
Denmark maintains an embassy at 3200 Whitehaven Street NW, Washington, DC 20008-3683 (tel. 202-234-4300). Consulates general are in Chicago and New York.
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Political
life in Denmark is orderly and democratic. Political changes occur
gradually through a process of consensus, and political methods and
attitudes are generally moderate. Growing numbers of immigrants and
refugees throughout the 1990s, and less than successful integration
policies, however, have in recent years led to growing support for
populist anti-immigrant sentiments in addition to several revisions of
already tight immigration laws, with the latest revision taking effect
July 1, 2002.
The Social Democratic
Party, historically identified with a well-organized labor movement but
today appealing more broadly to the middle class, held power either
alone or in coalition for most of the postwar period except from 1982
to 1993. From February 1993 to November 2001, Social Democratic Party
chairman Poul Nyrup Rasmussen led a series of different minority
coalition governments, which all included the centrist Social Liberal
Party. However, with immigration high on the November 2001 election
campaign agenda, the Danish People's Party doubled its number of
parliamentary seats; this was a key factor in bringing into power a new
minority right-of-center coalition government led by Liberal Party
chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen (no relation to Nyrup Rasmussen).
Parliamentary elections
held November 13, 2007 returned the coalition to government for another
term of up to four years. The coalition consists of the Liberal Party
("Venstre") and the Konservative Party, holding 64 of the 179 seats in
the Folketing, and has the parliamentary support of the Danish
People's Party, holding another 25 seats. The opposition Social
Democrats hold 45 seats, and the Social Liberals hold 9 seats.
Addressing the costs and benefits of the Denmark's comprehensive social
welfare system, restraining taxes, and immigration are among the key
issues on the current domestic political agenda.
Denmark's role in the
European Union (EU) remains an important political issue. Denmark
emerged from two referenda (June 2, 1992 and May 18, 1993) on the
Maastricht Treaty on the European Union with four exemptions (or
"opt-outs"): common defense, common currency, EU citizenship, and
certain aspects of legal cooperation, including law enforcement. The
Amsterdam Treaty was approved in a referendum May 28, 1998, by a 55%
majority. Still, the electorate's fear of losing national identity in
an integrated Europe and lack of confidence in long-term stability of
European economies run deep. These concerns were at the forefront of
the September 28, 2000 referendum on Denmark's participation in the
third phase of the Economic and Monetary Union, particularly the common
currency, the euro; more than 53% voted "no," and Denmark retained its
"krone" currency unit. The government and the pro-EU opposition have
agreed, and Denmark has received an EU green light to maintain the four
opt-outs throughout the process of approving and ratifying a new EU
constitutional treaty, with the ambition to eliminate several opt-outs
in late 2008.
Denmark's relatively quiet
and neutral role in international affairs was abruptly changed on
September 30, 2005, when the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten
printed 12 caricatures of Mohammed. Islamic law prohibits any visual
portrayal of Mohammed, and Muslims viewed the caricatures as offensive.
Muslims worldwide were infuriated with the Danes, beginning a boycott
of Danish products and burning several Danish embassies. The Danish
Government defended freedom of expression while it chastised the
newspaper for inconsideration. The newspaper apologized, and the Danish
Government repeatedly reiterated its support for freedom of religion,
but the Islamic community still holds much animosity toward the Danes.
ECONOMY
Denmark's
industrialized market economy depends on imported raw materials and
foreign trade. Within the European Union, Denmark advocates a liberal
trade policy. Its standard of living is among the highest in the world,
and the Danes devote about 0.8% of gross national product (GNP) to
foreign aid to less developed countries. In addition, Denmark in 2006
devoted 0.81% of GNP for overseas development, including for peace and
stability purposes, refugee pre-asylum costs, and for environmental
purposes in central and eastern Europe and developing countries.
Denmark is a net exporter
of food and energy. Its principal exports are machinery, instruments,
and food products. The United States is Denmark's largest non-European
trading partner, accounting for about 5% of total Danish merchandise
trade. Aircraft, computers, machinery, and instruments are among the
major U.S. exports to Denmark. Among major Danish exports to the United
States are industrial machinery, chemical products, furniture,
pharmaceuticals, canned ham and pork, windmills, and plastic toy blocks
(Lego). In addition, Denmark has a significant services trade with the
U.S., a major share of it stemming from Danish-controlled ships engaged
in container traffic to and from the United States (notably by
Maersk-SeaLand). There are some 375 U.S.-owned companies in Denmark.
The Danish economy is
fundamentally strong. Since the mid-1990s, economic growth rates have
averaged close to 3%, the formerly high official unemployment rate
stands at around 2%, and public finances are in surplus. Except for one
year--1998--Denmark since 1989 has had comfortable balance-of-payments
current account surpluses, in 2007 corresponding to 1.1% of GDP.
Denmark has maintained a stable currency policy since the early 1980s,
with the krone formerly linked to the Deutschmark and since January 1,
1999, to the euro. Denmark meets, and even exceeds, the economic
convergence criteria for participating in the third phase (a common
European currency--the euro) of the European Monetary Union (EMU).
Although a referendum on EMU participation held on September 28, 2000
resulted in a firm "no" and Denmark, therefore, has not yet adopted the
euro, opinion polls show a majority in favor of EMU. It is uncertain
when the government will have another referendum on the EMU/euro. Danes
are generally proud of their welfare safety net, which ensures that all
Danes receive basic health care and need not fear real poverty.
However, at present the number of working-age Danes living mostly on
government transfer payments amounts to more than 680,000 persons
(roughly 20% of the working-age population). Although this number has
been reduced in recent years, the heavy load of government transfer
payments burdens other parts of the system. Health care, other than for
acute problems, and care for the elderly and children have particularly
suffered, while taxes remain at a painful level. More than one-fourth
of the labor force is employed in the public sector.
Greenland and the Faroe Islands
The
Greenland economy has increased by an average of some 3% to 4% annually
since 1993, the result of increasing catches and exports of shrimp,
Greenland halibut and, more recently, crab. However, it was not until
1999 that the economy had fully recovered from the economic downturn in
the early 1990s. During the last decade the Greenland Home Rule
Government (GHRG) has pursued a fiscal policy with mostly small budget
surpluses and low inflation. The GHRG has taken initiatives to increase
the labor force and thus employment by, among other things, raising the
retirement age from 60 to 63 years. However, structural reforms are
still needed in order to create a broader business base and economic
growth through more efficient use of existing resources in both the
public and the private sector. Due to the continued critical dependence
on exports of fish, the economy remains very vulnerable to foreign
developments. The public sector, including publicly owned enterprises
and the municipalities, plays the dominant role in Greenland's economy.
Close to one-half of the government revenues come from Danish
Government grants, an important supplement of GDP. Greenland has
registered a foreign trade deficit since the closure of the last
remaining lead and zinc mine in 1989. Despite several interesting
hydrocarbon and mineral exploration activities, it will take several
years before production can materialize. The U.S. aluminum producer
Alcoa is in negotiations with Greenland Home Rule to build smelters in
Greenland to take advantage of abundant hydropower potential. Besides a
continued increase in local content, i.e., using a Greenlandic rather
than Danish work force in both the public and private sectors, tourism
appears to be the sector that offers the best near-term potential, and
even this is limited due to a short season and high costs. Politically,
the Greenland Home Rule Government has had increasing autonomy since
its creation in 1979. An independent commission from Greenland made
recommendations for greater self-rule in 2003. In May 2003, the Danish
and Greenland Home Rule governments reached agreement on a set of
power-sharing principles on Greenland's involvement in Danish foreign
and security policy. The so-called Itilleq Declaration provides that
Greenland will have foreign policy involvement with a view toward
having equal status on questions of concern to both Denmark and
Greenland. A Danish-Greenlandic Commission will make joint
recommendations in 2008 to the Danish parliament on ways to update the
Home Rule Act of 1979.
The Faroese economy has
performed strongly since the mid-1990s with annual growth rates
averaging close to 6%, mostly as a result of increasing fish landings
and salmon farming and high and stable export prices. Unemployment is
insignificant and there are labor shortages in several sectors. Most of
the Faroese who emigrated in the early 1990s (some 10% of the
population) due to the economic recession have now returned. The
positive economic development also has helped the Faroese Home Rule
Government produce increasing budget surpluses that in turn help to
reduce the large public debt, most of it to Denmark. However, the total
dependence on fishing and salmon farming makes the Faroese economy very
vulnerable, and the present fishing efforts appear in excess of what is
required to ensure a sustainable level of fishing in the long term.
Initial discoveries of oil in the Faroese area give hope for eventual
oil production, which may lay the basis for a more diversified economy
and thus less dependence on Denmark and Danish economic assistance.
Aided by an annual subsidy from Denmark corresponding to about 6% of
Faroese GDP, the Faroese have a standard of living comparable to that
of the Danes and other Scandinavians.
Politically, the present
Faroese Home Rule Government has initiated a process toward greater
independence from Denmark, if not complete secession from the realm. In
that respect, agreement on how to phase out the Danish subsidy plays a
crucial role.
NATIONAL SECURITY
Although
Denmark remained neutral during the First World War, its rapid
occupation by Nazi Germany in 1940 persuaded most Danes that neutrality
was no longer a reliable guarantee of Danish security. Danish security
policy is founded on its membership in NATO. Since 1988, Danish budgets
and security policy have been set by multi-year agreements supported by
a wide parliamentary majority, including government and opposition
parties. In 2006, Danish defense expenditures were 1.4% of GDP
according to a NATO estimate.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Danish
foreign policy is founded upon four cornerstones: the United Nations,
NATO, the EU, and Nordic cooperation. Denmark also is a member of,
among others, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund; the
World Trade Organization (WTO); the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE); the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD); the Council of Europe; the Nordic Council; the
Baltic Council; and the Barents Council. Denmark emphasizes its
relations with developing nations. Although the government has moved to
tighten foreign assistance expenditures, it remains a significant donor
and one of the few countries to exceed the UN goal of contributing 0.7%
of GNP to development assistance.
In the wake of the Cold
War, Denmark has been active in international efforts to integrate the
countries of Central and Eastern Europe into the West. It has played a
leadership role in coordinating Western assistance to the Baltic states
(Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania). The country is a strong supporter of
international peacekeeping. Danish forces were heavily engaged in the
former Yugoslavia in the UN Protection Force (UNPROFOR), as well as in
NATO's Operation Joint Endeavor/Stabilization Force in Bosnia and
Herzegovina (IFOR/SFOR), and currently in the Kosovo Force (KFOR).
Denmark has been a member
of NATO since its founding in 1949, and membership in NATO remains
highly popular. There were several serious confrontations between the
U.S. and Denmark on security policy in the so-called "footnote era"
(1982-88), when a hostile parliamentary majority forced the government
to adopt specific national positions on nuclear and arms control
issues. With the end of the Cold War, however, Denmark has been
supportive of U.S. policy objectives in the Alliance.
Danes have had a reputation
as "reluctant" Europeans. When they rejected ratification of the
Maastricht Treaty on June 2, 1992, they put the European Community's
(EC) plans for the European Union on hold. In December 1992, the rest
of the EC agreed to exempt Denmark from certain aspects of the European
Union, including a common defense, a common currency, EU citizenship,
and certain aspects of legal cooperation. On this revised basis, a
clear majority of Danes approved continued participation in the EU in a
second referendum on May 18, 1993, and again in a referendum on the
Amsterdam Treaty on May 28, 1998.
Since September 11, 2001,
Denmark has been highly proactive in endorsing and implementing United
States, UN, and EU-initiated counter-terrorism measures, just as
Denmark has contributed substantially to the International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan and the neighboring countries.
In 2003, Denmark was among the first countries to join the "Coalition
of the Willing" and supplied a submarine, Corvette-class ship, and
military personnel to the coalition's effort in Iraq to enforce UN
Security Council Resolution 1441. Since that time it has provided 500
troops to assist with stabilization efforts in Iraq. Prime Minister
Rasmussen announced in February 2007 that most Danish troops would be
withdrawn from Iraq by August 2007, as Iraqi forces had become capable
of taking over security responsibilities in the Basra area, where the
Danish troops had been concentrated.
U.S.-DANISH RELATIONS
Denmark
is a close NATO ally, and overall U.S.-Danish relations are excellent.
Denmark is active in Afghanistan and Kosovo, as well as a leader in the
Baltic region. Prime Minister Rasmussen reaffirmed that Denmark would
remain engaged in Iraq even as its troop levels there decline. Denmark
and the United States consult closely on European political and
security matters. Denmark shares U.S. views on the positive
ramifications of NATO enlargement. Denmark is an active coalition
partner in the War on Terrorism, and Danish troops are supporting
U.S.-led stabilization efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq. The U.S. also
engages Denmark in a broad cooperative agenda through the Enhanced
Partnership in Northern Europe (EPINE)--the U.S. policy structure to
strengthen U.S.-Nordic-Baltic policy and program coordination.
President Bush made an official working visit to Copenhagen in July
2005, and Prime Minister Rasmussen met with the President at Camp David
in June 2006 and in Crawford, Texas in March 2008.
Denmark's active liberal
trade policy in the EU, OECD, and WTO largely coincides with U.S.
interests. The U.S. is Denmark's largest non-European trade partner
with about 5% of Danish merchandise trade. Denmark's role in European
environmental and agricultural issues and its strategic location at the
entrance to the Baltic Sea have made Copenhagen a center for U.S.
agencies and the private sector dealing with the Nordic/Baltic region.
American culture--and
particularly popular culture, from jazz, rock, and rap to television
shows and literature--is very popular in Denmark. Some 311,000 U.S.
tourists visit the country annually.
The U.S. Air Force (USAF)
base and early warning radar at Thule, Greenland--a Danish
self-governing territory--serve as a vital link in Western defenses. In
August 2004, the Danish and Greenland Home Rule governments gave
permission for the early warning radar to be updated in connection with
a role in the U.S. ballistic missile defense system. At the same time,
agreements were signed to enhance economic, technical, and
environmental cooperation between the United States and Greenland.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--James P. Cain
Deputy Chief of Mission--Sandra L. Kaiser
Ambassador OMS--Jan Scott
DCM OMS--Sue A. Myers
Political/Economic Counselor--William Mozdzierz
Economic Officer--John Rath
Political Officer--Mark Draper
Public Affairs Officer--Thomas Leary
Consul--Marilynn Rowdybush
Management Officer--Sarah Hall
Environment, Science, Technology, and Health Officer--Erik Hall
Agricultural Attache--Steve Huete (resident in The Hague)
Senior Commercial Officer--Brad Hester (acting)
Defense Attache--Capt. Roger Coldiron, USN
Army Attache--Maj. Emily Thomas, USA (acting)
Air Attache--Lt. Col. Barbara East, USAF
Chief, Office of Defense Cooperation--Col. William Napolitano, USAF
Drug Enforcement Agency--Timothy Moran
Department of Homeland Security (ICE)--James MacDowell
Regional Security Officer--Jeff Howard
Legal Attache--Tim Flynn
The U.S. Embassy
is located at Dag Hammarskjolds Alle 24, 2100 Copenhagen O, Denmark
(tel. +45 33-41-71-00). The website contains links to U.S. Government
agencies at the Embassy and provides a wealth of information on
U.S.-Danish relations.