ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:96091005.NNE DATE:09/10/96 TITLE:10-09-96 ANALYST URGES US TO ADVOCATE MORE DEMOCRACY IN MIDDLE EAST TEXT: (Fuller calls for removal of Saddam Hussein) (440) By Rick Marshall USIA Staff Writer Washington -- The United States should become a much more forceful advocate for democracy in the Middle East, Graham Fuller, a prominent Rand Corporation analyst, said in a speech at Georgetown University September 9. Virtually every state in the region is being challenged by ethnic and religious groups who feel excluded from the country's political life, he said. Only by embracing a process of gradual democratization can the Middle East address the needs of the groups who are otherwise likely to tear the nations of the Middle East apart, he said. Fuller, a former vice chairman of the National Intelligence Council at the CIA, was quick to admit that the process of democratization was likely to cause considerable short-term difficulties for the United States and its allies in the region. But that should not prevent Washington from adopting a long-term and principled strategy to deal with the region, he argued. The region's political systems also need to be more decentralized, he said. More regional political and cultural autonomy can help stabilize nations which are being threatened by politically and culturally isolated minorities. One of the keys to the region is Turkey, Fuller said, a nation he described as a "genuine democracy" except with respect to its Kurdish population. This blind spot in the Turkish political makeup needs to be rectified if the country is going to survive in one piece, he opined. However, he expressed hope that over time Turkey would come to respect the human rights of the Kurds and permit them greater cultural autonomy. By extending the benefits of democracy to all segments of the population, Turkey could well become "a beacon" to its neighbors, he stressed. In the meantime, Turkey's geo-strategic importance continues to grow in significance. The country has become "vastly more important" than it was a few years ago," Fuller commented, noting how Turkey's influence in Central Asia, the Caucasus and Iraq has grown since the collapse of the Soviet Union. At the other end of the spectrum is Iraq, which Fuller described as being under the thumb of the most brutal leader in modern Middle Eastern history. Until Saddam Hussein is toppled -- one way or another -- there will be no stability in the Gulf, he warned. "The goal is to remove Saddam," Fuller commented. "Nothing can be resolved until he's gone." As a way of helping attain that goal, Fuller suggested the United States institute a "no-drive zone for tanks" to go along with the no-fly zones already established over much of Iraqi territory. NNNN