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Bush's Global War on Christians
Glan Chancy
For LewRockwell.com
... There is a belief, widespread among Christian conservatives,
that the 'War on Terror' is really a 'Clash of Civilizations.'
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, although himself a conservative Jew, summed
up the views of many Christian conservatives quite succintly
in one of his articles posted on the Internet. He wrote, "It
is time that I said in print what I have long felt in my heart:
I not only support President Bush, I revere him. At a time when
so many other world leaders want to paint Sept. 11 as a terror
attack, President Bush saw it for what it was: a clash of civilizations,
a war to the death between two systems one open, democratic
and respectful of human life, the other oppressive, tyrannical
and deeply contemptible of human life."
The 'War on Terror' then is not just about keeping the borders
of the United States secure. It is not simply about preventing
future terrorist attacks. Rather, the 'War on Terror' is the
ultimate showdown of Christianity (and Judaism) versus Islam.
It is a fight to the finish, and George W. Bush is our Richard
the Lionhearted, leading the armies of the Cross, allied with
those of the Star of David, to glorious victory.
In this apocalyptic setting, the vast majority of Christian
conservatives are backing President George Bush because they
sincerely believe that, "Something must be done about the
Muslim threat!" To these religious conservatives, George
Bush is willing to go on the offensive and strike back in the
name of God and country. They fear that John Kerry will surrender
to the Muslims, and allow Western Civilization to be overrun
a la Constantinople in 1453.
"Forget all of Bush's flaws," Christian conservatives
bellow, "At least he's willing to fight!"
So, is our glorious president leading the Christian World
in a great struggle against the Muslim hordes? If he were, then
a reasonable outcome of this 'Clash' would be that the position
of Christian (and Jewish) populations worldwide would be in the
process of becoming more secure.
This is, alas, absolutely not happening. In fact, the current
policies of the Bush administration are threatening to absolutely
devastate ancient and pious Christian communities whose blood
will be on all our heads. To deal with the subject honestly,
it must be acknowledged that it almost appears as if President
George Walker Bush were waging a global war against Christians.
There are a tremendous number of facts that could be marshaled
to support such a counterintuitive statement, and at least some
will be surveyed in this article. However, the primary thrust
of this article will be to analyze the policies of the Bush Administration
that have placed us on the road to destroying one of the oldest
Christian communities in the entire world the Assyrians
of Iraq.
Iraq Before the Liberation
To understand the situation in Iraq today, in proper context,
let's first review some basic facts about Iraq as it was under
Saddam Hussein's regime.
Saddam Hussein was a bad Muslim, and everybody knew it. A
secular dictator, he ruthlessly suppressed radical religious
sentiment, and tried to build a modern state. Saddam was bitterly
hated and reviled by Muslim radicals as diverse as Osama Bin
Laden and the Shi'ite Ayatollahs of Iran. In a tape released
by Osama bin Laden in February 2003, Saddam Hussein is referred
to as an 'ignorant infidel.' The Iranian clerics hated Saddam
so much that they repeatedly spurned peace initiatives to end
the Iran-Iraq War, in the hopes continued fighting could topple
his government. They intended to replace it with a Shi'ite dominated
state modeled after their own. Eventually, they got smart enough
to hire Ahmed Chalabi to convince the U.S. to topple Saddam for
them.
Saddam had inherited the Ba'ath Party ideology of secular
pan-Arab socialism, and hewed to many of its tenets throughout
his brutal rule. Iraqi women enjoyed more rights than women in
the surrounding Arab countries. Women could hold jobs and attend
higher education, all with uncovered faces. In fact, women comprised
20% of the professional workforce.
Under Saddam, alcohol merchants plied their wares freely in
their shops. The lack of enforcement of the Sharia made Iraq
the party spot of the region. David Younan Oro, a 70-year-old
patriarch of a Christian family in Ramadi, ran casinos and nightclubs
during the heyday of Saddam's regime. He described the glory
days like this, "They drink like donkeys here. Business
was good. I had a lot of restaurants and shops." If you
stayed out of politics, life and business were good.
Among the primary tenets of Ba'athist ideology was a dedication
to religious tolerance. This is not surprising, since the intellectual
father of Ba'athism was Michel Aflaq, himself an Orthodox Christian.
In keeping with Ba'athist ideology, Saddam did not interfere
with the rights of the Assyrian Christians in Iraq to practice
their faith. Comprising somewhere between one and two million
Iraqis, the Aramaic-speaking Assyrians are the original inhabitants
of the modern-day state of Iraq.
The Assyrians did suffer repression under Saddam Hussein,
who suppressed their ethnic and linguistic distinctiveness while
trying to meld the hodgepodge of peoples in Iraq into a unified
state. At no time, however, were the Assyrians ever denied the
free practice of their religion, nor did they fear for their
lives simply because of their faith.
One measure of the relative religious freedom of the Assyrians
under Saddam was the exuberant and public celebration of Christmas.
As one writer described it, "Christmas decorations, including
nativity scenes, were seen in shops, restaurants and hotels.
And Saddam reportedly sometimes attended services at Christian
churches in Baghdad and even delivered an annual Christmas address."
As for the United States, Saddam seems to have pined for better
relations. He had been a de-facto ally of the U.S. during his
war against Iran, and appears to have wanted to recapture that
status. According to the Duelfer Report, compiled by the Iraq
Survey Group (ISG), beginning already in 1991, "very senior
Iraqis close to the president made proposals through intermediaries
for dialogue with Washington," even offering to be Washington's
"best friend in the region bar none."
Apparently, Saddam never did understand why he couldn't just
work a deal with the U.S. In his beffuddlement, Saddam is not
alone. Many other observers of the region still can't grasp why
this secular dictator made it to the top of the U.S. hitlist
in a war supposedly directed at Muslim extermists.
Iraq After the Liberation
To say the least, since being liberated from Saddam, things
have gone badly for a great many Iraqis. However, the time has
been especially harsh for the Assyrian Christians. Large areas
of Iraq are now under the control of Muslim religious leaders
whose militias have been enforcing Muslim law. Based on locally
issued fatwas, these armed fanatics have killed Christians for
engaging in prohibited businesses such as selling alcohol or
other formerly legal products. Many Christian business men have
seen their shops, restaurants, and other business either forcibly
closed or confiscated.
David Younan Oro's casino, the flagship of his family business,
was taken over by armed men who converted it to a Mosque. "We
had a very good situation until the fundamentalists began to
appear and we were affected," said Roger William, Oro's
son-in-law. "Because America and Britain are Christian countries,
they blame us for the war. We are terrified. We really don't
know what the future will hold."
Even Christian homes and private land are being appropriated.
The Kurds, America's erstwhile allies, are among the worst offenders.
Writing about the situation in Dara, his home village, an Assyrian
Christian living in London reported that, "The Kurdish people
are building homes on our village's land, without our permission.
It is sad to say, our own neighbors are stealing it from us."
Christians have reported rapes, kidnappings, and assaults.
The situation is so bad, that Christian children have been gunned
down in their own homes. This little girl, Raphid was gunned
down in her home along with her sister in July. She was only
six years old. Her sister, Raad, was only sixteen. They belonged
to a well-known Assyrian Christian family that had been threatened.
While the family was out, terrorists entered and shot the two
children at point blank range.
These two little girls died simply because they were Christians
in a country increasingly slipping into Muslim rule.
Armed groups of men have stopped cars on the street and harangued
women whose heads are uncovered, accusing them of violating Islamic
law. Even Christians have started wearing headscarves out of
fear, something that never happened under Saddam Hussein's regime.
As Christians have retreated into the shadows, the compromise
Transitional Administrative Law in force in Iraq today has actually
gone far towards officially establishing Islamic rule in what
was once a secular country. Article 7 states, in part, that "Islam
is the official religion of the State and is to be considered
a source of legislation. No law that contradicts the universally
agreed tenets of Islam, the principles of democracy, or the rights
cited in Chapter Two of this Law may be enacted during the transitional
period." It further complicates the problem for Christians
in Iraq that they are under represented in the interim government
when compared with their percentage of the population. It is
almost as if the U.S. intentionally excluded them in the lead
up to the 'handover' of power.
Nor do the promised elections in January appear likely to
improve the situation. According to a recent poll released by
the International Republican Institute (an organization allied
with the U.S. Republican Party), the highest level of support
among Iraqis for any politician belongs to Abdul Aziz al-Hakim,
leader of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
The name of his organization probably speaks for itself.
It is bitterly ironic that far from bringing Western secularism,
the U.S.-invasion has instead opened the door for an Islamic
Republic. Out of fear, an estimated 40,000 to 45,000 Assyrians
have already fled Iraq. Most have found shelter in Syria next
door, a nation that the U.S. may be targeting next in its drive
to spread 'freedom' in the Middle East. Had President George
W. Bush set out with the intentional goal of destroying the Christian
population in Iraq, it is hard to see how he could have been
more effective than he has been to date.
More Fronts in the War
President Bush has continued the NATO occupation of Kosovo.
Since the end of the war against Serbia, Kosovo has been the
scene of anti-Christian ethnic cleansing on a massive scale.
More than 120 churches have been destroyed, some dating to the
14th century. 240,000 Christian Serbs have fled the province.
Periodic anti-Christian pogroms such as the one that erupted
from March 17th March 18th kill dozens, wound hundreds,
and cause more Serbian Christians to flee for their lives. While
the U.N. administers the province, NATO troops, some 60,000,
are the actual force on the ground. This means that, ultimately,
the Bush Administration bears the responsibility for failing
to protect the Christians in Kosovo from Muslim fanatics.
Elsewhere in the Balkans, the Bush Administration has continued
the status quo in Bosnia, which allows Muslim terrorists to use
it as a safe-haven for recruiting and training. According to
European intelligence sources, Bosnia has become a "one-stop
shop" for Islamic militants heading from terrorist battlegrounds
in Chechnya and Afghanistan to Iraq. In addition, the U.S. under
Bush has continued to try and dismember the nation of Macedonia
by forcing it to make ever larger concessions to its Muslim Albanian
minority.
The Bush Administration has made Turkish entry into the European
Union a number one priority on its international agenda. Despite
Turkey's horrendous record of mass murder and abuse of its Christian
minorities, President Bush has been intervening personally to
try and convince skeptical Europeans that, "Including Turkey
in the EU would prove that Europe is not the exclusive club of
a single religion, and it would expose the 'clash of civilizations'
as a passing myth of history." President Bush's single-minded
determination to see Turkey in the EU even drove him to try and
force a bad settlement of the Cyprus queston on unwilling Greek
Cypriots, who ultimately rejected it.
Ironically, even as his Christian supporters in the U.S. bemoan
the increasing Islamization of Europe, President Bush is doing
everything he can to make sure that 70 million more Turkish Muslims
will have the opportunity to settle there. While the possibility
that this massive migration could destroy the very heart of Christendom
seems to be lost on President Bush, certain European leaders
have become quite alarmed. Addressing the issue of Turkey joining
the EU, former French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing said,
"In my opinion, it would be the end of Europe."
Both d'Estaing and Jacques Chirac, current president of France
and a favorite target of American Christian conservatives, have
positively emerged as defenders of the faith as they fight against
Turkish accession to the EU. If only President Bush had as much
dedication to Europe's Christian heritage as the heroic French.
In Chechnya, a region much in the news since the Beslan massacres,
the U.S. has inserted itself on the side of the Muslims opposed
to Russian rule. Foremost among the American agitators against
Russia is The American Committee for Peace in Chechnya, a front
group of Bush-connected neoconservatives such as Richard Perle,
James Woolsey, Michael Ledeen and Kenneth Adelman. The ACPC wants
Putin to negotiate with the Chechens rebels, and favors a NATO
presence in Chechnya along the lines of the NATO missions in
Bosnia and Kosovo. President Putin seems to be relatively uninterested
in listening to their ideas. If only the American president were
half as wise.
Conclusion
Whatever President Bush and his coterie are doing globally,
one thing is abundantly clear. They are not fighting a global
war on any kind of Islam, radical or otherwise. On the other
hand, they are making tremendous progress towards crippling or
completely destroying large segments of the world's Christian
population. And in this slaughter, the American people have become
his accomplices.
Despite all of the negative impacts of his foreign policy
on Christians globally, the Christian conservatives in America
have been deafeningly silent. Two reasons account for this. First
is their overwhelming pre-occupation with Israel. The State of
Israel and its security were mentioned by both presidential candidates
in their debates. The need to protect Israel is the subject of
daily articles in conservative publications, both online and
dead tree. Pat Robertson even threatened to form a third party,
if the Republicans ever waiver in their full-throated support
of the State of Israel. Such concern for the plight of Christians
abroad is non-existent.
Perhaps if the Assyrians and others renounced Christ and embraced
the Talmud, American Christians would care what happens to them?
The second reason is the fear that criticizing Bush will hurt
his chances of re-election. For this reason, many Christians
have kept their silence, all the while knowing the truth of what
is happening. This is not a Christian attitude. Christ stood
for the truth at all times, not only when it was expedient. Standing
silent in the face of suffering, simply to prevent inconvenience
to a favored politician, is not following the way of Christ.
It is time for Christian conservatives to end the silence.
We must speak out, and we must let the President, whether it
be Bush or Kerry, know that a continuation of these disastrous
policies will absolutely not be tolerated.
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