SYDNEY,
December 1 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A final decision
whether Australia will join a U.S.-led attack on Iraq will be made by
the government and debated by the parliament afterwards, Prime
Minister John Howard said Sunday, December 1.
He
promised parliament could and would be recalled at any time to debate
the issue, which brought thousands of anti-war protesters into the
streets of Australia's major cities over the weekend, reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
"The
decision is one for the executive government," Howard told
Channel Nine's Sunday program.
"But
I have said, as my predecessors have said, if we take the decision to
commit forces, we would have a parliamentary debate and I would want
to have a parliamentary debate quickly if there were any
decision."
The
Labor opposition expressed disappointment on hearing parliament would
debate the issue after a decision was made and not before.
"Our
view is that there can be no graver decision than to send our sons and
daughters abroad to war, in particular a war against Iraq,"
opposition foreign affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd said Sunday.
"It
is just the right thing to do have first a full parliamentary debate
in this country prior to the decision to send to war, not afterwards
when it's too late."
Howard
statements came after some 20,000 anti-war protesters, many of them
Middle-Eastern migrants, took to the streets Saturday and Sunday in a
campaign to rally opposition to Australian involvement in another war
in Iraq.
More
than 10,000 marched in Sydney Saturday in a demonstration organized by
an alliance of left-wing activists, trade unions and church leaders
and attended by show business personalities and public figures.
Children
carrying anti-war placards led a rally of 5,000 through Melbourne,
stopping traffic in the city centre Sunday. Thousands more attended
smaller rallies in Adelaide, Canberra and Brisbane.
Clothing
Union official Michelle O'Neil told the Melbourne rally a U.S.-led
push for war was about oil and plans to control the Middle East.
"This
will be about the deaths of thousands of innocent people who are no
different from you and I in what they care about," she said.
"It's
about people who have a right to a safe life, about people who have a
right to a country that is not invaded when they have not taken action
against the U.S.A."
Howard
also warned Australia would be prepared to attack a neighboring
country if there was evidence a terrorist act against Australia was
being planned. "I think any Australian prime minister
would," he said.
"It
stands to reason that if you believe somebody was going to launch an
attack on your country, either of a conventional kind or a terrorist
kind, and you had a capacity to stop it and there was no alternative
other than to use that capacity, then of course you would have to use
it.
"That
situation hasn't arisen because nobody has specifically threatened to
attack Australia."
Howard
said the UN charter on self-defense, developed when conflicts were
defined in terms of nations attacking nations, should be altered to
allow nations to pre-emptively strike at known terrorist threats
anywhere.
However,
a senior Philippines official Sunday criticized the Australian
proposal to amend the UN charter.
"I
do not think that is advisable," President Gloria Arroyo's
National Security Adviser Roilo Golez told reporters. The proposal was
outlined by Australian Defense Minister Robert Hill last week.
Golez
said: "Sovereignty is not decided by a fight, it's decided by
right."
The
United States has argued that it has the right to launch a pre-emptive
unilateral strike against Iraq if it judges that Baghdad is failing to
honor UN demands it abandon its weapons of mass destruction.
To
meet the evolving new threats, Golez said "there should be a
multilateral effort where countries should exchange intelligence
information if there is a need for, maybe military assistance, not in
the form of manpower but in the form of technology, equipment.".