REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — From seafaring Vikings to digital dissenters, Iceland has always attracted outsiders.
This North Atlantic island nation has welcomed eccentric chess master Bobby Fischer, WikiLeaks secret-spiller Julian Assange and the online freedom advocates of the Pirate Party. Could its next guest be Edward Snowden, the American intelligence contractor who leaked secrets from the National Security Agency?
In an interview published Sunday outing himself as the source behind stories about the U.S. spy agency's online surveillance programs, Snowden floated the idea of heading to Reykjavik. He told The Guardian newspaper that he was inclined to seek asylum in a country that shared his values — and "the nation that most encompasses this is Iceland."
That has left many in this tiny seafaring nation, population 320,000, flattered, if bemused.
"I think it would be great for (Snowden) to come to Iceland," Bjorn Sigurdarson, an executive at the University of Iceland, said Monday. "The actions by the U.S. government are disturbing and if we could protect him here, we should. But it's a little funny how our tiny country is in the news about this."
Iceland may be a global minnow, but it has a tradition of providing a haven for the outspoken and the outcast.