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Turkish National Security Council Asks Parliament For War Approval

“The enemy will not enter Baghdad's suburbs because he will die,” Saddam

ANKARA, February 1 (News Agencies) - Turkey will soon have to decide how far it will go in its support for Western military allies in a possible war with its neighbour Iraq, observers said Saturday, February 1, as Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein vowed to kill one million “enemies” if they attack Baghdad.

Turkey’s influential National Security Council, which brings together top army commanders and the civilian leadership, asked the government Friday to seek parliamentary approval for military measures if war breaks out against Baghdad, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

"Although Turkey prefers a peaceful resolution, it will not refrain from taking measures to protect its national interests if a military operation (on Iraq) becomes inevitable," the council said in a statement.

The Council's recommendation, which by law the government must give top priority, came after the powerful military warned that Turkey would have no say in the future of the region if it opts out of participation in a possible conflict, the Turkish press said Saturday.

"The view that participating in a U.S.-led coalition is the most viable way to minimize Turkey's losses in a war... has gained weight in the National Security Council," an editorial in the liberal Radikal daily said.

"If political initiatives (for a peaceful resolution) fail, Turkey will give active support to the U.S.-led international coalition," it added, quoting sources close to the Council meeting.

The Turkish military has long pressed the government to make up its mind on a possible war on Iraq. At a press briefing last month, top army officials pointed out that any kind of decision on Iraq was better than indecision.

However, the NATO-member country has frustrated its key ally, the United States, by delaying its final word on Washington's requests for help against Iraq, including the deployment of U.S. soldiers on Turkish territory and the use of several air bases and ports.

Friday's Council statement specifically brought up the constitutional article required parliament to judge on whether to allow foreign troops to be deployed on Turkish soil and whether to send Turkish soldiers abroad.

The council did not, however, make reference to the possible opening of Turkish air bases for U.S. use.

Saddam Intensifies Rhetoric

Meanwhile, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein vowed Saturday, February 1, to kill one million enemy soldiers if they try to take Baghdad but offered to cooperate with the U.N. disarmament process after inviting the chief UN weapons inspectors back to Iraq.

"The enemy will not enter Baghdad's suburbs because he will die. Even if they send a million soldiers, our boys will kill them," Saddam told senior military aides.

"The enemy will land in remote regions and film it," the Iraqi strongman said, according to reports released to the official press.

Saddam charged that the "enemy media will then start saying that they are at some distance from Ramadi (west of Baghdad) or somewhere else and now on its way to invade this or that city.

"This is how they are going to put on their show," he added as U.S. President George Bush warned that war could be just weeks away unless the Baghdad regime disarms in line with U.N. resolutions.

As Washington presses the U.N. Security Council to authorise war, the press said Saddam had reviewed with top aides, including Defence minister Sultan Hashem and his own son, Qussay, strategies to defeat an enemy landing while limiting Iraqi losses.

"When the enemy lands, he ensures air protection. And when you attack to destroy him, he will destroy you with his air forces," the president warned.

"Have you taken this into account in training and what measures have you taken to surround and destroy the enemy without being destroyed yourself from the air," he asked.

"The force which counters an enemy landing must be close to it. For that we have to spread troops across the desert at the risk of exposing them to enemy fire and our training must be carried out in line with this theory. Otherwise it will not be realistic.

Saddam said that in the event of war U.S. troops would be landed in an unpopulated region, such as the deserts of the west, and in the Al-Jazira region between Mosul and Samarra.

Mussa warns war will not bring about democracy

In a separate related development, the Secretary General of the Arab League, Amr Mussa, said that a U.S.-led war to topple Iraqi President Saddam Hussein will not produce a democracy in the oil-rich country.

Mussa was speaking to a German weekly magazine, Focus, in an interview due to be published on Monday and said: “War cannot produce democracy. (Democracy) is achieved without using force."

Asked what he thought about the possibility of a U.S. military invasion of Iraq leading to U.S. forces being stationed in the country for several years to back up whatever government replaced the current Baghdad regime, Mussa said: "That should not happen."

"Ask Arabs if they can accept that," he added.  Mussa insisted United Nations arms inspectors should be allowed to complete their mission in Iraq before the UN Security Council judges whether Baghdad has complied with its demands that it abandon any weapons of mass destruction it might possess.

Mussa said in Syria on Friday the 23-nation Arab League was "opposed to any military attack" on Iraq.

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