In this mailing:
- Raymond Ibrahim: Genocide of
Christians Reaches "Alarming Stage"
- Amir Taheri: Iran's Options
and the Destructive Defiance
by Raymond Ibrahim • May 26, 2019
at 5:00 am
- Many of the world's
most persecuted Christians have nothing whatsoever to do with
colonialism or missionaries. Those most faced with the threat
of genocide — including Syria's and Iraq's Assyrians or
Egypt's Copts — were Christian several centuries before the
ancestors of Europe's colonizers became Christian and went
missionizing
- The BBC report
highlights "political correctness" as being
especially responsible for the West's indifference....
- Among the worst
persecutors are those that rule according to Islamic law, or
Sharia -- which academics such as Georgetown University's John
Esposito insist is equitable and just. In Afghanistan (ranked
#2), "Christianity is not permitted to exist."
UK Foreign
Secretary Jeremy Hunt (pictured) commissioned an "Independent
Review into the global persecution of Christians," which was recently
published. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images)
"Christian persecution 'at near genocide
levels,'" the title of a May 3 BBC report, cites a lengthy
interim study ordered by British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and
led by Rev. Philip Mounstephen, the Bishop of Truro.
According to the BBC report, one in three people
around the world suffer from religious persecution, with Christians
being "the most persecuted religious group".
"Religion 'is at risk of disappearing' in some parts of the
world, " it noted, and "In some regions, the level and
nature of persecution is arguably coming close to meeting the
international definition of genocide, according to that adopted by
the UN."
British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt is also quoted
on why Western governments have been "asleep" — his word
— concerning this growing epidemic:
by Amir Taheri • May 26, 2019 at
4:00 am
- To start with, we
must realize that the crisis in question isn't caused by any
of the traditional causes of conflict between
nation-states.... In other words, the conflict isn't a
classical international one. The reason is that Iran no longer
behaves as a nation-state but as a vehicle for an ideology.
- The madness that is
Khomeinism has always had its method, which includes abject
surrender when pressed too hard and brazen aggression when
pressure is eased.
- Contrary to claims
by the pro-mullah lobby in Washington, the choice isn't
between surrender to Khomeminist madness and full-scale
invasion of Iran. Only when the threshold of tolerable pain is
reached the "Supreme Guide" may well reconsider his
options. We are not there yet.
The
madness that is Khomeinism has always had its method, which
includes abject surrender when pressed too hard and brazen
aggression when pressure is eased. There are signs that Iran's
"Supreme Guide," Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, may be
contemplating what he has called "heroic flexibility".
(Image source: kremlin.ru)
According to an old adage, every crisis also
contains an opportunity. And the current crisis between the Islamic
Republic of Iran and the United States may be no exception. Intense
sabre-rattling on both sides, combined with what one might call
"diplomacy of gesticulations," have reignited interest in
what was a half-dormant conflict. That renewed interest could be
used for persuading both sides, and others interested in the
"Iran problem", to re-visit the root causes of the
conflict. And, having done so, try to find realistic ways of
defusing the situation.
But before that could be done, a number of steps
must be taken.
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