|
Asia
Bibi is a mother of five children and a devout
Christian. She is also on death row — for
“blasphemy.” And incredibly, she lives under a
government that receives billions of U.S.
taxpayer dollars every year: Pakistan, one of
the top recipients of American foreign aid. Over
the last 10 years, the Pakistani regime has
raked in well over $20 billion from U.S.
taxpayers.
Meanwhile, the
government has been brutally persecuting and
oppressing the sizeable Christian minority.
Indeed, the Pakistani regime consistently ranks
as among the worst in the world in terms of
persecution. And according to senior U.S.
officials, Pakistan’s “intelligence” services
have even been collaborating with terrorist
groups to attack American targets.
Almost three years ago, Bibi was working as a
farmhand when she apparently got into an
argument with some Muslim women also working in
the fields. Her co-workers alleged that she
“defamed” the Islamic prophet, Mohammed. She
insists she merely defended her own faith and
was falsely accused because of existing
animosity. That’s when the tragic ordeal began.
Hearing that a Christian woman made a derogatory
remark about Mohammed, a furious mob led by a
local cleric promptly descended on Bibi’s home.
According to news reports, her family was beaten
and tortured by the outraged local residents.
They sexually assaulted Bibi, put a noose around
her neck, and almost killed her.
When police finally arrived, they rescued the
family — temporarily, at least — before charging
Bibi with a capital offense: blasphemy. She was
ultimately arrested, and has been in jail ever
since. Her family went into hiding to avoid
being murdered by vigilantes. “My children,” she
wrote in a letter to her family, published in a
book about her ordeal, “don’t lose courage or
faith in Jesus Christ.”
In November of 2010, Bibi, also known as Aasiya
Noreen, was sentenced to execution by hanging.
She has been in a tiny prison cell for years —
in deplorable conditions and complete isolation
— awaiting an appeal with a higher court. But
even if she is freed, countless religious
leaders have vowed to murder her — there is
already a bounty on her head.
And Bibi was not the only victim. As her case
attracted international attention, Salmaan
Taseer, the Governor of Punjab, spoke out in
defense of Bibi and against Pakistan’s brutal
blasphemy laws. He paid for his activism with
his life. In January of last year, he was
murdered by a member of his own security detail.
Hundreds of Muslim scholars and clerics praised
the assassination, and more than a thousand
lawyers rushed to the killer’s defense. Taseer’s
son was kidnapped by Jihadists later that year.
Two months after the assassination, Pakistani
Minister of Minority Affairs Shahbaz Bhatti —
the only Christian Minister in the regime — was
also murdered. His killers left leaflets at the
crime scene indicating that they assassinated
him for opposing the blasphemy law.
Just this March, another mother, 26 years old,
was reportedly taken into custody on “blasphemy”
charges. More than a few Christians have been
executed by vigilantes after being charged.
“A close examination of the cases reveals the
blasphemy laws are often invoked to settle
personal scores, or they are used by Islamist
extremists as cover to persecute religious
minorities, sadly with the help of the state
under these laws,” noted Pakistanis for Peace
founder Manzer Munir, saying there had been
almost 1,000 cases of “blasphemy” since the
death penalty was adopted as a punishment for it
in 1986.
The U.S. government, of course, knows very well
that it is bankrolling the atrocities. “Pakistan
continues to be responsible for systematic,
ongoing, and egregious violations of freedom of
religion or belief,” noted the U.S. Commission
on International Religious Freedom in its 2011
annual report. And conditions continue to
deteriorate.
Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, another close U.S.
“ally,” is also ranked as among the worst
oppressors of Christians in the world, behind
only Afghanistan and North Korea. And the
hard-line Islamic dictatorship’s Grand Mufti —
the highest-ranking Muslim cleric — recently
claimed it was “necessary to destroy all
churches in the region.”
Trillions Spent,
and for What?
After trillions of dollars and thousands of
American lives were sacrificed by the U.S.
government over the last decade intervening in
the Middle East — the birthplace of Jesus Christ
and Christianity — Christian communities are
facing unprecedented struggles across most of
the region. More than a few analysts have even
called the systematic and growing persecution of
Christians throughout much of the Muslim world
an ongoing example of genocide.
“Conditions for genocide against non-Muslim
communities exist in varying degrees throughout
the region stretching from Pakistan to Morocco.
The crisis of survival for non-Muslim
communities is especially acute in Iraq, Syria,
Egypt, Sudan, the Palestinian territories, Iran
and Pakistan,” explained Dr. John Eibner of the
non-profit human-rights group Christian
Solidarity International. “Millions of lives and
the future of a religiously pluralistic
civilization in the Middle East are at stake.”
According to some estimates, more than 150,000
Christians are murdered every year for their
faith around the world. The vast majority of
those — over three-fourths — are in
Islamic-dominated nations. And in many cases,
U.S. taxpayers are either subsidizing the
slaughter by distributing billions to oppressive
regimes, or worse, helping to create the
conditions that allow the persecution to happen
in the first place.
One of the most frequent excuses offered to
justify the persecution of Christians by
murderous regimes and the anti-Christian
fanatics they enable is that believers in Christ
are somehow acting as surrogates or proxies for
Western interests — especially the U.S.
government. After decades of meddling in the
internal affairs of nations around the world —
backing dictators, sparking revolutions,
imposing sanctions, and more — America is widely
perceived as hostile and dangerous. Plus, as
tyrants throughout history have learned,
minorities make good scapegoats.
The trend of linking local Christian populations
to American foreign policy goes back decades. In
1970, for example, Iran’s Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini issued an official Islamic decree, or
“fatwa,” accusing Iranian Christians of “working
with American imperialists and oppressive rulers
to distort the truths of Islam, lead Muslims
astray, and convert our children.” The fatwa
came while the Western establishment was still
intervening on behalf of the Shah of Iran —
leading to widespread anti-American resentment —
and after the Central Intelligence Agency
sparked a coup d’état in 1953 under the guise of
fighting communism.
More recently, U.S. government intervention in
the region has been justified using a broad
array of issues: supposed “Weapons of Mass
Destruction” (WMDs), the terror war, regional
security, trade, and vaguely defined “national
interests.” But increasingly, American
policymakers have been meddling in the Middle
East under the guise of “spreading democracy.”
And as analysts have noted, when the
overwhelming majority of the population is
Muslim, so-called “democracy” — or majority rule
— does not generally bode well for Christians
and other minorities.
But to better understand the role of U.S.
foreign policy in the ongoing and worsening
atrocities against Christians, it helps to
examine the two nations where the American
government has been most involved over the last
decade: Iraq and Afghanistan. According to
experts like Chairman Leonard Leo of the U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF),
an official advisory body, there is now a very
real prospect that Christianity could be
completely wiped out in both countries. And in
other nations — from Libya and Egypt to Pakistan
and Syria — the effects of U.S. policies are
producing similar fruit.
Iraq
Christianity goes back almost 2,000 years in the
land known today as Iraq. In fact, Assyrian
Christians are often said to be the true
indigenous people of the area. The devout
communities there survived through centuries of
invasion, persecution, and attempted
extermination. Despite the never-ending
onslaught, Christianity continued to thrive.
Until “democracy” arrived, that is.
In the wake of the U.S. invasion and occupation
— which in 2007 the Congressional Budget Office
estimated would cost U.S. taxpayers about $2
trillion — Christianity in Iraq might very well
be fully eradicated. Reliable estimates found
that about 1.4 million Christians lived in Iraq
before 2003. Today, that number is less than
500,000, with some experts claiming the true
figure is actually around 200,000. In all, some
two-thirds of the nation’s Christians have
already fled or been killed.
Despite making up just three percent of the
population prior to the U.S. invasion, according
to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees,
Christians accounted for nearly half of the
refugees by 2008. Much of the faithful remnant
in Iraq is seeking a way out before the
persecution gets even worse — and that is
despite calls by numerous Iraqi church leaders
for the Christian communities to remain in their
homeland.
Under the secular dictatorship of Saddam
Hussein, Christians and other minorities were
largely protected from Islamist violence and
genocide — unlike in many areas of the Middle
East. Indeed, the tyrant’s socialist Ba’th Party
was founded by Michel Aflaq, an Orthodox
Christian, and actually held “freedom of
religion” as one of its core tenets.
Of course, as is well documented, enemies of the
Iraqi regime were viciously persecuted and
slaughtered. Despite the fact that the U.S.
government once supported the regime, Hussein
has been properly characterized as a monster.
But under the dictator’s iron fist, Christians
worshipped openly throughout Iraq and were not
treated any worse than Muslims or anyone else.
Anti-Christian violence, prevalent across much
of the Middle East, was not tolerated. Almost
unprecedented in the entire region’s
contemporary history: A Catholic, Tariq Aziz,
served as Iraq’s Deputy Prime Minister and
Foreign Minister.
Even before the United States invaded Iraq, the
repercussions of overthrowing a secular dictator
in the Middle East were glaringly obvious to
analysts — then-President George W. Bush was
even warned of the consequences by his own
advisors. The public was alerted, too, or at
least could have been had citizens taken the
time to perform a simple online search. Just a
few weeks before American forces invaded,
analyst and political-science expert Glen
Chancy, a member of the Orthodox Church, wrote a
piece explaining exactly what was likely to
happen to Christians in the wake of war.
“This may come as a shock to many Americans,
whose image of Saddam has been framed by
comparisons to Adolf Hitler, but the prevalent
fear among Assyrians [Christians], both in Iraq
and abroad, is that what comes next after an
American invasion will be worse,” he wrote.
“Should the Assyrians be so concerned about
being liberated by U.S. military power? If
history is our guide, they shouldn’t be afraid.
They should be terrified.”
Chancy made no effort to hide the murderous and
barbaric nature of Saddam’s tyranny. But the
Iraqi tyrant was brutal to all, and unlike under
most Middle Eastern regimes, Christians in Iraq
were doing very well. “Saddam’s regime has
permitted a degree of free practice for
Christians that is positively enviable compared
to the situations experienced in such U.S.
‘allies’ as Pakistan and Saudi Arabia,” he
noted. “Christmas and Easter decorations always
abound, even in Baghdad, and attending church
does not require an act of courage.”
After the United States invaded, however,
everything changed. “The Assyrians have survived
the coming of the Persians, the Arabs, and the
Turks,” Chancy observed. “It remains to be seen
if they will survive the coming of the
Americans.” Unfortunately, as Chancy and
countless other analysts warned, Christians did
not fare well. With the fall of Hussein’s
regime, Islamist militias vented their fury not
just on the “infidel” invaders, but on local
Christians, too.
Businesses were seized, churches were bombed,
women were raped, Sharia law was brutally
enforced, and Christians, including women and
children, were viciously slaughtered. Muslim
extremists throughout the nation and Kurdish
nationalists in northern areas — supposedly U.S.
allies — all participated in the massacres and
persecution.
A year after the U.S. invasion, Chancy’s dire
warnings had become reality. “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,” he observed in late 2004,
saying the American people had become
accomplices in the slaughter and destruction of
large segments of the world’s Christian
population.
“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,” he
wrote. “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.” That was in 2004.
Since then, the situation has deteriorated
further. In October of 2010, for example,
Islamic extremists under the banner of the
“Islamic State of Iraq” attacked Our Lady of
Salvation Syriac Catholic Cathedral in Baghdad.
More than 50 Christians were murdered including
two priests. The same church had already been
bombed in 2004.
In August of 2011, a series of apparently
coordinated attacks on more than a dozen
churches left over 65 dead. In 2006, a
14-year-old boy was reportedly crucified. A
priest was also beheaded. Christian women and
girls, meanwhile, are also among the victims,
being routinely targeted for rape and execution.
The new U.S.-imposed “democracy” regime remains
unable or unwilling to do much about the
problem. Perpetrators are rarely brought to
justice, and in more than a few cases, officials
have been suspected of involvement. The brave
Christians who remain in Iraq live in complete
terror.
“Why did they come? To do what? They came to
give us freedom — the freedom to kill one
another,” Auxiliary Chaldean Bishop of Baghdad
Shelmon Warduni told the Christian relief agency
Aid to the Church in Need. Countless senior
church figures have expressed similar thoughts
in recent years.
“Everybody hates the Christian. Yes, during
Saddam Hussein, we were living in peace — nobody
attacked us. We had human rights, we had
protection from the government. But now, nobody
protects us,” explained Archbishop Athanasios
Dawood of the Syrian Orthodox Church, accusing
the U.S. government of making empty promises.
“Since 2003, there has been no protection for
Christians. We’ve lost many people and they’ve
bombed our homes, our churches, monasteries.”
Top Vatican officials have pointed to the
tragedy facing Christians in Iraq as well. After
blasting the “pre-emptive” U.S. war as a “crime
against peace” before the invasion began,
President of the Pontifical Council for
Interreligious Dialogue Jean-Louis Tauran noted
in a 2007 interview that Christians,
“paradoxically, were more protected under the
dictatorship.”
Even the U.S. government’s own research confirms
the ongoing tragedy. “In Iraq, members of the
country’s smallest religious minorities suffer
from targeted violence, threats, and
intimidation, against which the government does
not provide effective protection,” noted the
USCIRF in its 2011 annual report. “These
violations are systematic, ongoing and
egregious, and perpetrators are rarely
identified, investigated, or punished, creating
a climate of impunity.”
In fact, beyond failing to protect Christians,
the new regime installed by Western forces is
actually part of the problem. “The smallest
minorities also experience a pattern of official
discrimination, marginalization, and neglect,”
the report stated. “The violence, forced
displacement, discrimination, marginalization,
and neglect suffered by members of these
[Christian and other minority] groups threaten
these ancient communities’ very existence in
Iraq.”
Analysts debate the causes of Christianity’s
virtual extermination in Iraq under U.S.
military occupation. Some say the American
government was not prepared to deal with the
situation. Others contend that it simply had
other priorities and was not sufficiently
concerned with the fate of Christians and
minority groups.
International relations and geopolitics analyst
Lee Jay Walker, for example, wrote in the
Seoul Times that “the destruction of
Christianity in Iraq is taking place because of
misguided American policies and because the
Christian community is not deemed to be
important.” No matter the reason, however, it is
undeniable that Christians in Iraq have suffered
tremendously as a direct result of U.S.
foreign policy.
Meanwhile, the purpose of the war — WMDs,
terror, democracy, freedom? — remains as elusive
as ever. But the constitution of Iraq, imposed
with Western assistance, has come under fire
from around the globe. “Islam is the official
religion of the State and it is a fundamental
source of legislation,” it states. “No law that
contradicts the established provisions of Islam
may be established.” The document also enshrines
big-government control over healthcare,
education, employment, housing, and virtually
every other sector.
Afghanistan
As in Iraq, the history of Christianity in
Afghanistan is believed to go back almost 2,000
years. According to numerous sources, the
apostle Thomas set out for the region and
preached the Gospel throughout several areas
that are now part of modern-day Afghanistan and
India. The so-called “Church of the East”
thrived in the region for almost 1,000 years
until the arrival of strict Islamism in the 13th
and 14th centuries resulted in the destruction
of churches and the attempted eradication of
Christianity. Still, a small remnant of
Christians is believed to have survived in
Afghanistan over the centuries.
The Afghan Taliban — largely armed and trained
in the 1970s and 1980s by the U.S. government
and its allies — was brutal when it finally
seized power, especially to Christians. Once the
coalition of Islamic extremists took over Kabul,
it destroyed churches and viciously sought to
stamp out Christianity. But despite the
persecution, a sort of “underground” church
continued to exist throughout the group’s
murderous reign.
According to the U.S. State Department, the
hidden Christian minority inside Afghanistan is
estimated at between 500 and 8,000 adherents.
Other estimates place the number even higher,
but it is impossible to know — publicly
admitting to be a Christian would be a death
sentence. Thousands more live as exiles outside
of the country.
Incredibly, since the U.S. occupation began in
2001, experts say the situation for Christians
in Afghanistan has not only failed to improve —
it may have actually become worse. Even regular
Afghans now associate Christians with the widely
unpopular foreign occupation. And the new
government is openly hostile to Christianity,
which is, for all intents and purposes, illegal.
Meanwhile, the Taliban continue to rule over
vast swaths of the nation, waging “jihad”
against any Christians they may discover —
foreign or domestic. Plus, the Obama
administration is desperately seeking to
negotiate with the group in a bid that could see
it eventually restored to power. Hardly
encouraging to U.S. troops or local Christians.
Finally, the last remaining public Christian
church in Afghanistan was demolished in 2010.
Apparently the courts refused to uphold
Christians’ claim to the property. And the
U.S.-backed regime has not issued a single new
building permit for churches.
Open Doors’ 2012 World Watch List, a yearly
ranking of the worst regimes in terms of
Christian persecution, ranked Afghanistan as
number two, up from third place the year before.
The only nation worse than Afghanistan was the
mass-murdering communist dictatorship ruling
North Korea, which, perhaps ironically, also
receives significant amounts of aid from the
U.S. government. Saudi Arabia came in third.
For Afghanistan too, official U.S. entities
acknowledge the tragic situation. “The
government’s level of respect for religious
freedom in law and in practice declined during
the reporting period, particularly for Christian
groups and individuals,” noted the 2010 State
Department Religious Freedom report almost a
decade after U.S. forces invaded Afghanistan and
overthrew the government. That decline came
after President Obama’s military “surge,” too.
“Negative societal opinions and suspicion of
Christian activities led to targeting of
Christian groups and individuals, including
Muslim converts to Christianity,” the report
noted. “The lack of government responsiveness
and protection for these groups and individuals
contributed to the deterioration of religious
freedom.”
In its 2011 report, the USCIRF reported similar
findings. “Conditions for religious freedom
remain exceedingly poor for minority religious
communities and dissenting members of the
majority faith [Islam], despite the presence of
U.S. armed forces in Afghanistan for almost 10
years and the substantial investment of lives,
resources, and expertise by the United States
and international community,” it noted, adding
that even the government was prosecuting people
for such “crimes” as apostasy and blasphemy.
“The 2004 Afghan constitution has effectively
established Islamic law as the law of the land.”
The new Afghan constitution, imposed with help
from the U.S. government, states that “no law
can be contrary to the beliefs and provisions of
the sacred religion of Islam” — Islam being the
“official” religion of Afghanistan. And because
certain interpretations of the Koran call for
executing those who leave Islam, the few
remaining Christians live under permanent threat
of martyrdom at the hands of the U.S.
government-backed regime or the Taliban,
America’s former ally.
After a media broadcast showed Afghans being
baptized, U.S.-backed “President” Hamid Karzai
vowed to hunt down the new Christians. Some 20
people were reportedly arrested. A series of
official prosecutions of Christians and converts
has indeed helped shine the international
spotlight on the issue — putting global pressure
on the regime to back down in a few cases. But
converts like Sayed Mussa, for example, have
been imprisoned, raped, tortured, and prosecuted
for their faith in Christ. Mussa and others like
him were facing the death penalty, but massive
global outcries may have saved their lives.
Of course, the U.S.-subsidized persecution has
not gone unnoticed. Some American officials have
even complained. “We cannot justify taxpayer
dollars going to a government that allows the
same restrictions on basic human rights that
existed under the Taliban,” charged Rep. Trent
Franks (R-Ariz.) and Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-Colo.)
in a letter to then-U.S. Ambassador to
Afghanistan Karl W. Eikenberry. So far, however,
it appears that little has changed.
Libya
Libyan
strongman Moammar Gadhafi was brutal to
opponents, but his regime was largely secular in
nature. The vast majority of his victims —
especially in recent years — were hardline
Islamic extremists seeking to overthrow his
government and install a theocracy. The
notorious al-Qaeda affiliate known as the Libyan
Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), for example, was
a top enemy of Gadhafi and, until recently, the
U.S. government.
As in most Islamic-dominated societies,
Christians did face restrictions. Evangelizing
to Muslims, for example, was mostly prohibited.
But Gadhafi was not normally openly hostile to
the more than 100,000 Christian faithful
throughout the nation. In fact, he was actually
on very friendly terms with the leader of Coptic
Christianity, whom he offered an award in 2003.
The tyrant even gave Copts in Libya buildings to
use as churches — for free.
Then the war came. The coalition of “rebel”
leadership working with Western forces to bring
about “regime change” was made up of senior
al-Qaeda personnel associated with the LIFG,
former Gadhafi officials, members of the Muslim
Brotherhood, and other radicals — more than a
few of whom publicly boasted of having battled
American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. The
U.S. government knew, but helped arm and train
them anyway.
As the conflict grew, Christians promptly fled
the nation en masse, fearing the worst. A few
months into the conflict, Sylvester Magro, the
Catholic bishop of Benghazi, told Reuters that
his usual flock of around 10,000 had been
reduced to a few hundred. A Coptic priest said
his congregation declined from more than 1,000
to about 40. It remains unclear how many might
return.
But thousands of black Christians and members of
other non-Muslim communities — mostly migrant
workers — were trapped inside Libya between the
warring factions. And they paid dearly.
Observers called the persecution of blacks
“ethnic cleansing” and even “genocide.”
Thousands faced rape, torture, and execution.
More recently, footage emerged of blacks in a
cage being forced to eat flags as Libyan
Islamists taunted them. After the U.S.
government- and NATO-backed rebels took over,
the al-Qaeda flag even flew over the rebel
headquarters in Benghazi.
Meanwhile, as analysts warned, the war on Libya
also offered unprecedented amounts of military
weaponry to al-Qaeda and assorted radical
Islamists — missiles, machine guns, and much
more. And now, according to officials and
reports, those heavy weapons are being turned on
Christians and others throughout the region.
For now, the situation in Libya remains highly
uncertain and volatile. While the “new” Libya —
if the Western-backed regime manages to cling to
power amidst ongoing chaos and battles — will be
governed by strict sharia law, senior officials
have promised to respect minorities. Whether
that will be the case, however, is still
unclear. Most analysts don’t believe it.
And so far, the trend is less than encouraging.
As rebels marched into Tripoli, for example,
Saint George’s Church — the oldest Orthodox
church in North Africa, dating back to 1647 —
was ransacked and desecrated. Meanwhile,
Christians who imported Christian literature
were imprisoned. And in March, heavily armed
Islamists desecrated the Christian graves of
fallen Italian and British World War II veterans
in Benghazi, smashing crosses and headstones
with a sledge hammer. “This is a grave of a
Christian,” one of the men says in a video of
the incident posted online. The new regime
apologized, but around the world, people were
outraged.
Consider, too, that the new Libyan government is
pursuing “integration” with the neighboring
regime in Sudan, officially designated by the
U.S. State Department as a “state-sponsor” of
terror. (Ironically, the U.S. government is also
supplying aid and training to that regime’s
“security” apparatus.) The brutal
socialist-Islamic dictatorship in Sudan, led by
mass-murderer and indicted war criminal Omar
Al-Bashir, has reportedly massacred millions of
people — mostly Christians and members of
various animist sects. In March, the regime also
announced that it was expelling between 500,000
and 700,000 Christians from the nation by
stripping them of their citizenship.
Egypt
Christianity has existed in Egypt for almost
2,000 years. And today, Coptic Christians
represent about 10 percent of the nation’s
population. But for the ancient minority
community, recent developments have hardly been
positive. In fact, hundreds of thousands of
Copts have already been forced to flee their
homes as mob violence and state-sponsored
persecution continue to grow.
Despite the general brutality of Hosni Mubarak,
he was a close U.S. ally for dec-ades before he
was forced to step down by Western
establishment-backed protests and, eventually,
President Obama’s demands. “Change must take
place,” Obama said. “My belief is that an
orderly transition must be meaningful, it must
be peaceful, and it must begin now.”
But unlike the nation’s new U.S.-sponsored
rulers, the former tyrant at least tried to
protect the Coptic community from radical
Islamist terror. Perpetrators were punished, and
violence against minorities was not tolerated.
Today, all that has changed. The military junta
now in charge, rather than protecting
Christians, is actually killing them and
allowing them to be killed. After a wave of
savage terror attacks against Copts and their
churches rocked the nation, the new regime
refused to take action. So Christians decided to
protest the attacks and the lack of protection
offered by authorities.
Activists marched to the state-run TV station in
Cairo, chanting and demanding reforms. Instead
of protection, however, the military regime
responded with brute force. “Security” forces
mowed down hundreds of Christian protesters with
guns and tanks, killing dozens and injuring
hundreds more. “The Copts are being persecuted
by the state,” priest Sila Abd al-Nour was
quoted as saying during a ceremony mourning the
victims.
And again, the U.S. government — which sends
over a billion in “security” assistance to Egypt
every year, and will continue to do so despite
recent developments — knows very well what is
going on. “Since February 11 [2011, when Hosni
Mubarak stepped down], military and security
forces have reportedly used excessive force and
live ammunition in targeting Christian places of
worship and Christian demonstrators,” noted the
USCIRF’s report last year.
Of course, Egypt is an entirely different
situation than Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya
because U.S. forces are not active participants
there. But while the U.S. military did not
participate directly in the removal of America’s
former ally, the federal government is known to
have played a large role in his ouster.
American
diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show
that the U.S. embassy in Cairo was well aware of
the "regime change" operation being planned, and
even provided key training and support for its
leaders at taxpayer expense. When some of the
"activists" were arrested by the Mubarak regime,
American officials demanded they be set free.
And according to Egyptian prosecutors, an
assortment of U.S. government-funded
“Non-Governmental Organizations” (NGOs)
continuing stirring up the unrest even after the
“revolution” succeeded.
So-called “pro-democracy” groups funded by
American taxpayers — the International
Republican Institute (IRI), the National
Democratic Institute (NDI), and Freedom House —
were very active in Cairo until Egyptian
authorities finally cracked down. “The United
States and Israel could not create a state of
chaos and work to maintain it in Egypt directly,
so they used direct funding to organizations,
especially American, as a means of implementing
these goals,” noted Egyptian Minister of
Planning and International Cooperation Aboul
Naga in official testimony about the criminal
charges against the groups’ employees.
But even if the tax-funded “NGOs” are taken at
their word and were simply “promoting
democracy,” as they claim, the interference,
aside from being unconstitutional, is considered
by some analysts to be a travesty. Consider the
recent elections: The Muslim Brotherhood and an
even more radical Islamist party dominated,
taking control of more than 70 percent of the
seats in Parliament.
Tunisia suffered a similar fate. And while the
Islamist groups surging to power in the
so-called “Arab Spring” claim they will support
the individual rights of minorities, very few
observers are convinced. Islamic law will almost
certainly become the new law of the land. And
U.S. taxpayers will foot the bill. The Egyptian
regime alone is slated to receive about $1.5
billion this year.
More
of the Same, Coming Soon
Incredibly,
despite the unprecedented trail of death and
destruction unleashed by recent U.S. government
intervention overseas, President Obama, speaking
before the UN General Assembly in September,
declared that more UN-led wars were needed to
ensure peace. He cited Libya, Iraq, and
Afghanistan as success stories.
Another Obama-backed UN military adventure,
while much less well-known around the world, was
also cited by the President as a model to
emulate in the future: the violent overthrow of
Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo last year
by international forces and local partner
militias. “The world refused to look the other
way,” Obama declared, mistakenly claiming that
Gbagbo had lost the election. “The [UN] Security
Council, led by the United States, Nigeria, and
France, came together to support the will of the
people.”
The reality of the “regime change” operation, of
course, bears little resemblance to the picture
painted by Obama. Vote fraud and ballot-box
stuffing resulted in the nation’s Constitutional
Council declaring incumbent President Laurent
Gbagbo the election winner. And that was
supposed to be the final word, at least
according to Ivorian law.
But instead of respecting the nation’s
constitutional system, Obama, France, and the UN
decided to invade. Partnering with local Muslim
militias, international forces dropped bombs and
marched to the capital to arrest President
Gbagbo, a Christian — slaughtering and raping
tens of thousands of Christians along the way.
Many fleeing Christians were hacked to death
with machetes. U.S. Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.)
called the UN- and Obama-backed campaign “a
reign of terror.”
The international coalition and its militias on
the ground then installed a Muslim central
banker named Alassane Ouattara as the Ivory
Coast’s new ruler. But despite the impression
given by Obama in his speech, critics say the
campaign was an illegitimate and bloody disaster
that should never have happened. But it will not
be the last. During Obama’s UN speech, he
praised the wars and demanded more international
military intervention. The two countries in the
crosshairs now: Iran and Syria.
After decades of U.S. meddling in Iran that
included a CIA-orchestrated coup d’état and
variously backing both sides during the
Iran-Iraq war (including giving Hussein WMDs and
facilitating secret illegal weapons sales to the
Iranian regime), Western powers are at it again.
There is already a covert war going on against
Iran that involves the use of terror and
assassinations. But much of the Western-backed
dirty work is being carried out by the
officially designated “foreign terrorist
organization” known as the -Mujahedin-e Khalq,
an Islamo-Marxist group that has murdered more
than a few senior American military officials
and countless civilians.
Christians (at least those who did not convert
from Islam) and Jews in Iran are currently
allowed to worship relatively freely. But if
Western “regime change” through overt military
force does arrive, that would almost certainly
change. There are currently almost 500,000
Christians in Iran, and experts say a Western
invasion or military campaign would — like it
did in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya — put them
in grave jeopardy.
In Syria, the Western-backed “regime change”
campaign is already underway, too. Indeed, the
situation there bears striking resemblances to
some elements of the U.S. campaigns in Iraq and
Libya. As in Iraq before the American invasion,
the Socialist Ba’th Party, rules over Syria with
an iron fist. But Christians in Syria are better
off than almost anywhere in the region, often
serving in top government jobs, from Ambassadors
to senior law-enforcement officials. Despite the
ongoing strife and relatively new wave of
Islamist attacks on Christians, Syria remains,
according to Christian leaders and analysts, one
of the final refuges of Christianity in the
region.
“Syria has been very much a safe haven for
Christians in the Middle East, one of the few
Arab countries where they were treated with
respect and had equality with the Muslim
majority. Syria also has a history of welcoming
in persecuted Christians from other countries,”
noted Dr. Patrick Sookhdeo, international
director of the Barnabas Fund, a non-profit
group that supports persecuted and oppressed
Christians. “But I greatly fear that within the
near future we will see a new Iraq developing in
Syria.”
Christians who fled in droves to Syria from Iraq
in the wake of the U.S. invasion are now faced
with the prospect of death and persecution there
as Western governments, led by the Obama
administration, join forces with al-Qaeda to
oust Assad in a scenario reminiscent of the
underhanded war on Libya. The Western and
Islamist alliance, along with the Turkish regime
— which is becoming increasingly Islamist as it
continues to deny its mass murder of Christians
over the last century — have been working with
the so-called “Syrian National Council,” a
coalition of opposition groups that is largely
dominated by the Marxist-inspired Muslim
Brotherhood and other extremists. And Christians
throughout Syria fear that, if Assad falls,
Islamists will take over, and Christianity will
be brutally wiped out there, too.
Refugees and Reason
Even as U.S. policies continue to lead to
massacres of Christian communities throughout
the Middle East, members of those communities
are having a difficult time escaping the
destruction. “Christians are being refused
refugee status and face persecution and many
times certain death for their religious beliefs
under ... sharia, while whole Muslim communities
are entering the US by the tens of thousands per
month despite the fact that they face no
religious persecution,” noted Pamela Geller,
executive director of the American Freedom
Defense Initiative and of Stop Islamization of
America.
But how could the situation have become so dire?
While not all analysts agree, at the very least,
it has become clear that the fate of Christians
and Christianity is low on the U.S. government’s
agenda. And without an outcry, that is unlikely
to change.
“Fundamentally, United States policies in the
Middle East have never placed a significant
priority on the conditions of indigenous
Christians or the threats they have been up
against just for being Christian. There is an
ingrained culture in Washington’s foreign policy
establishment that prefers to avoid addressing
the existential phobias of the region’s
Christians,” noted author Habib Malik, a
professor of history and cultural studies at the
Lebanese American University. “These beleaguered
Christian communities have become marginalized
in American strategic thinking and hence
expendable next to larger and more pressing
economic, political, and security interests.”
But according to other experts, the fact that
U.S. foreign policy is highly detrimental to
Christians around the world should come as no
surprise. After all, this is the same government
that, along with its partners in the media, has
been relentlessly seeking to eliminate all
vestiges of Christianity from public life in
America.
“Our government’s policies in the Middle East
are a reflection of our government’s policies at
home. The war on Christianity in public life
here at home in the schools and courthouses is
manifested in the Middle East with the
destruction of Christianity in the nations where
we have been interfering,” said CEO Art Thompson
of The John Birch Society, citing Iraq, Egypt,
Libya, and other nations. But the continuing
destruction of Christians and Christian culture
is often impelled by forces beyond a particular
U.S. administration, even beyond the U.S.
government.
“Likewise, the domestic policies of people in
the federal government who are connected to the
Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) moving us
toward domestic socialism are reflected in the
Middle East with CFR-connected organizations
financed by the federal government interfering
in Middle Eastern politics with disastrous
results, with Egypt being the prime example,”
Thompson added. “The rise of militant Islam is
nothing more than a rise of socialism under a
different title.”
“I do not believe that our fighting men and
women had this in mind when they committed
themselves to combat,” noted Thompson. “Instead
of freedom, the aftermath is totalitarianism and
less security for the people of all religions.”
Indeed, polls show U.S. troops are quickly
losing confidence in Obama and the wars.
As predicted by innumerable experts, imposing
“democracy” in Muslim-majority countries has
been a disaster for Christians. Asked for an
example of U.S. foreign policy benefiting
Christians, a senior official with the USCIRF
could not name one. Christianity has managed to
survive in the Middle East for 2,000 years
without U.S. government intervention. But if
current trends continue, the religion of Christ
could very well be eradicated in the region of
its birth within the next few decades. And
unfortunately, America will bear at least part
of the responsibility.
This article is
an example of the exclusive content that's only
available by subscribing to our print magazine.
Twice a month get in-depth features covering the
political gamut: education, candidate profiles,
immigration, healthcare, foreign policy, guns,
etc.
Both digital and
print options available! |