HISTORY
Iceland was settled in the
late 9th and early 10th centuries, principally by people of Norse
origin. In 930 A.D., the ruling chiefs established a republican
constitution and an assembly called the Althingi--the oldest parliament
in the world. Iceland remained independent until 1262, when it
entered into a treaty establishing a union with the Norwegian
monarchy. Iceland passed to Denmark in the late 14th century when
Norway and Denmark were united under the Danish crown.
In the early 19th century,
national consciousness revived in Iceland. The Althingi had been
abolished in 1800 but was reestablished in 1843 as a consultative
assembly. In 1874, Denmark granted Iceland home rule, which again
was extended in 1904. The constitution, written in 1874, was revised
in 1903, and a minister for Icelandic affairs, residing in Reykjavik,
was made responsible to the Althingi. The Act of Union, a 1918
agreement with Denmark, recognized Iceland as a fully sovereign
state united with Denmark under a common king. Iceland established
its own flag, but Denmark continued to represent Icelandic foreign
affairs and defense interests.
German occupation of Denmark in 1940 severed communications between Iceland and Denmark. Consequently, Iceland moved immediately to assume control over its own territorial waters and foreign affairs. In May 1940, British military forces occupied Iceland. In July 1941, responsibility for Iceland's defense passed to the United States. Following a plebiscite, Iceland formally became an independent republic on June 17, 1944. In October 1946, the Icelandic and U.S. Governments agreed to terminate U.S. responsibility for the defense of Iceland, but the United States retained certain rights at Keflavík. Iceland became a charter member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in 1949. After the outbreak of hostilities in Korea in 1950, and pursuant to the request of NATO military authorities, the United States and Iceland agreed that the United States should again make arrangements for Iceland's defense. A bilateral defense agreement signed on May 5, 1951, remains in force, even though the U.S. military forces are no longer permanently stationed in Iceland. Iceland is the only NATO country with no standing military of its own.