According to the minutes of the meeting at the Pentagon, Wolfowitz asked Rasmussen about the Danish government's position on a possible invasion of Iraq.
"Denmark would undoubtedly, when the time comes, provide its support,"
Rasmussen told Wolfowitz, reports Politiken.
This private assurance contrasts with the pronouncements Rasmussen made to the Danish parliament and public, in which he repeated that no decision had been made on the issue ahead of a parliamentary vote on going to war. Politiken notes that as late as January 2003, Rasmussen told parliament that there was no sense in engaging in "hypothetical speculation" on Danish participation in an Iraqi war.
On March 21, 2003, the Danish Parliament approved a decision to go to war, with 61 votes in favor, 50 against and 68 abstentions.
Rasmussen headed a coalition between his liberal Venstre Party and the Conservative People's Party, and served as Prime Minister from November 2001 to April 2009.
"I have the impression that we were the victims of a charade," said Lykketoft, who added that Rasmussen told him that Denmark would wait for a UN decision on military participation, just days before he changed his mind and told Lykketoft he was backing US military intervention.
"When I put him on the spot and said the UN had not approved military action, to the contrary, he said he thought it was always in Denmark's interest to go along with the US, no matter what."
Lykketoft also expressed opposition on Friday to the decision announced on Thursday by the new Danish government, a minority Venstre administration, to close the Commission of Inquiry on Denmark's involvement in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"It does not look good to interrupt a commission in the middle of its work," the Chairman of the Danish Association of Judges, High Court Judge Michael Sjoberg, told Politiken.