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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: George Coyne who wrote (342771)1/13/2003 9:25:34 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
TURKEY OPPOSES BUSH CRIMINAL PLOTTING

Turkish Prime Minister Calls for Region to Stave Off US-Led War on Iraq

Iranian VP sees future: "Experience shows that we cannot trust the United States. If it leads an attack on Iraq, there is no doubt that the turn of other countries in the region will also come."

truthout.org

sg.news.yahoo.com

Turkish Prime Minister Calls for Region to Stave Off US-Led War on Iraq
Agence France-Presse

Monday 13 January 2003 -- 7:02 am.eu

Turkish Prime Minister Abdullah Gul called for Muslim and Arab countries to work together to avert a
US-led war in Iraq that he feared would have disastrous repercussions for the Middle East.

"We must undertake steps and seize this final chance to avoid a war in which the Iraqi people and all
the people of the region will pay the price," Gul said at a press conference in Tehran.

Grilled about his approving US military inspectors to survey air bases and ports in Turkey that could be
used in case of such war, Gull acknowledged his country's difficult position as a top US military ally in the
region.

"Each country must prepare for all scenarios and be ready for any eventuality," he said, while alluding to
Turkey's reluctance to let US troops pass through its territory to enter Iraq.

Stressing Turkey and Iran's wish to find a peaceful solution to the crisis over Baghdad's alleged secret
weapons of mass destruction, Gul said: "If there is a military attack on Iraq, all the countries in the region
will suffer."

Gul did not comment on whether his regional tour -- which also took him to Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia
and Syria -- could lead to the sending of an envoy to Baghdad to seek a last minute breakthrough with
Saddam Hussein.

"All the countries of the region must coordinate their actions to prevent a war, but the principal effort
must be made by Iraq," Gul said.

As the prime minister made the rounds in Iran, a Turkish state minister, Kursat Tuzmen, visited
Baghdad with a message from Gul for Saddam who, in turn, handed over messages to be delivered to
Ankara.

In Tehran, Gul held talks with Iranian President Mohammad Khatami, Vice President Mohammad Reza
Aref and Foreign Minister Kamal Karazi.

IRNA quoted Aref as saying, "The Islamic Republic of Iran is totally opposed to an attack on Iraq. The
Iraqi question must be resolved by peaceful means."

Aref called on Muslim and Arab countries to work together to find a peaceful solution to the problem
posed by Washington's determination to rid Iraq of its alleged weapons of mass destruction.

"Experience shows that we cannot trust the United States. If it leads an attack on Iraq, there is no
doubt that the turn of other countries in the region will also come," he said.

Khatami, meanwhile, was also quoted by IRNA reiterating Iran's staunch opposition to a war on Iraq.

Both Turkey and Iran are alarmed by the prospect of a US-led offensive, notably because it might
encourage separatism among their own Kurdish minorities by bringing about the creation of an independent
Kurdish state in northern Iraq.

Iran, which has been lumped by Washington on an "axis of evil" with Iraq and North Korea, is also
worried at the prospect of an enlarged and permanent US military presence in the region.

In Riyadh on Saturday Gul warned that little time was left to find a peaceful settlement to the Iraqi crisis
but said states in the region were formulating an anti-war initiative.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said earlier Sunday that the Turks had proposed sending an envoy
to see Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

"We told them that we are in agreement, on condition that it has America's blessing, as we don't want
problems," he told journalists in southern Egypt.

Mubarak, who is also to visit Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, did not say if he was referring to Turkish state
minister Kursat Tuzmen, who arrived in Baghdad Friday at the head of a delegation of about 400
businessmen saying he was carrying "Turkish proposals concerning the current situation" to Saddam.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is also to visit Tehran on Wednesday for talks on the standoff
between Iraq and the United States, a foreign ministry spokesman said Sunday.

Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah and Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed al-Fahd
al-Sabah arrived here Saturday.

An Iranian foreign ministry spokesman said a projected visit to Iran by Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri
was still being debated.

Iran and Iraq fought a bloody and costly war from 1980 to 1988, and Tehran is seeking reparations and
an apology from Baghdad, as well as the release of prisoners it says are still being held and the
acceptance of a 1975 accord on their common border.