By Doug Bandow on 1.2.07 @ 12:07AM
The country has become a particularly dangerous place for Christians.
It was Christmas in Iraq as well as America, but there were
fewer celebrations than in the past. Iraq has become a particularly
dangerous place for Christians: it is safer to stay home than
attend services, and even better to seek refuge in Kurdish
territory or leave Iraq entirely.
Washington is filled with talk of new directions in Iraq.
President George W. Bush has largely dismissed the Iraq Study Group
report and apparently plans on modestly upping U.S. occupation
forces. However, a temporary surge isn't likely to have much
permanent effect. The future of Iraq almost certainly is in the
hands of Iraqis. The number of optimists who expect to see a
liberal, Western-oriented, united Iraq are dwindling fast.
Virtually invisible, alas, has been the status of Iraq's
Christians. To raise awareness of their plight the group Christians
for Assyrians of Iraq held a rally outside the White House in early
December. Christianity predates Islam in Iraq, and believers
survived centuries of persecution. Although a brute, Hussein did
not target Christians, who were largely free to work and
worship.
Then Hussein's ouster seemed to open the country to evangelism.
Jim Jacobson, president of Christian Freedom International (CFI),
told the American Conservative: "A lot of Iraqis were
seeing Christianity for the first time," resulting in an "explosion
of conversions" and "underground, nondenominational churches."
But the collapse of Iraqi civil society quickly dissipated the
ecumenical spirit of religious liberty. Although the Shiite-
dominated government does not oppress, Christians are a uniquely
vulnerable, disfavored minority with neither political power nor
militia protection. Christians, usually in business and often
thought to have wealthy relatives abroad, are targeted by
criminals. Believers also are caught in the violent cross-fire that
now characterizes so much of Iraqi society.
Finally, as Carl Moeller of Open Doors USA told the American
Conservative, "Christians are targeted specifically for being
Christians." The attacks began early -- in early 2004 Paul
Marshall, then of Freedom House, pointed to increasing assaults on
Christians. The violence has only gotten worse. Canon Andrew White,
the vicar of St. George's Church in Baghdad, told the
Times of London: "All my staff at the church have been
killed." Historian Fred Aprim has composed a long list of attacks,
available on The Christians of Iraq website. CFI,
which is making aid to Christian Iraqis a priority, has publicly
warned of "a silent reign of terror" against believers.
Although they have been identified with the U.S. -- most Iraqi
Christians welcomed American troops and many Christians speak
English and signed up as interpreters -- they have received little
help in return. The Bush administration wants to avoid appearing to
favor any group. Business analyst Glen Chancy has complained:
"Evidencing too much concern for Iraqi Christians, it is feared,
would reinforce the idea that the U.S. is fighting a 'war on
Islam.'"
So bad have things become that many Iraqi Christians now look
back on Saddam Hussein's rule as a time of relative peace. Solaka
Enweya fled to Syria with his three sons. He explained to the
New York Times: "When we heard that the Americans were
going to liberate Iraq, we were so happy. Yet our suffering has
only increased."
For many Christians in Iraq, flight is the only option. The
United Nations estimates that about 40 percent of the more than
million Iraqis who have emigrated are Christians. That's an
astounding number for a group who made up perhaps four percent of
Iraq's pre-war population. Some Iraqi Christians believe the number
of emigres is higher: Chaldean Catholic Auxiliary Bishop Andreos
Abouna of Baghdad says half of Iraq's 1.2 million Christians may
have fled.
Ironically, most of them have ended up in Syria, a member of the
Axis of Near-Evil, and Jordan and Lebanon, rather than in America
or the West. United Nations officials figure that about 100,000 of
Christian Iraqis would like to come to America, but only 200 were
allowed into the U.S. last year. Lawrence Kaplan of the New
Republic complains that the administration prefers not to
acknowledge the existence of religious persecution, since doing so
would counter its claim that steady progress is being made in Iraq.
Arthur E. Dewey, the assistant secretary of state for refugee
affairs until 2005, echoes Kaplan's charge: "for political reasons
the administration will discourage" Iraqi resettlement in the U.S.
"because of the psychological message it would send, that it is a
losing cause."
The tragic irony of the Iraqi exodus is that it is U.S. action
that threatens to trigger the final destruction of a historic
Christian community deep in the Middle East. Nina Shea of the
Hudson Institute speaks of the "extinction of an ancient Christian
community" which dates "to apostolic times." A community of
believers who survived prior rounds of religious persecution and
political oppression. So bad is the situation that Mark Hetfield,
senior vice president of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, which
traditionally has helped Jews come to America, told the New York
Times: "There are few religious minorities in the world today as
persecuted as the Iraqi Christian population."
There are no good options in Iraq, and it is unrealistic to
expect to expect U.S. policymakers to design overall policy around
the suffering of Iraqi Christians. However, argues Jacobson,
"America has a moral obligation to help people who have come under
jihadist attack because of their association with the U.S."
A few steps suggest themselves. First, as long as American
troops are on patrol, they should set as a priority protecting
Christian communities. Second, as areas are turned over to Iraqi
forces, the Bush administration should insist that the U.S.-
supported government and U.S.-trained police and military treat
Christians fairly. (This is a problem even in Kurdistan, where
officials discriminate against Christian villages in the
distribution of American aid.)
Third, as Iraqis debate the future of their nation, Washington
should propose creation of a special administrative district for
Christians in the north of Iraq. It might not survive a U.S.
withdrawal, but Christians likely would be more secure there than
in isolated neighborhoods and villages. Obviously, Washington might
not be able to enforce its wishes, but it has an obligation to make
an effort on behalf of the Christian minority.
Most important, America must welcome Christians who flee Iraq.
If the administration loses face, so what? That the invasion of
Iraq has not turned out according to plan is obvious to all.
Washington can ill afford to abandon Iraqis, non-Christians as well
as Christians, who supported American efforts and now find
themselves at risk.
Generously accepting political refugees should be treated as
separate from the larger immigration debate. The cause of Iraqi
Christians is just and their numbers are small. Turning our backs
on them would be contrary to America's most basic values, while
demonstrating yet again that Washington can be counted on to forget
its friends. That surely is not a lesson the administration should
allow to emerge from its policy in Iraq.
There is no consensus about the best strategy in Iraq, but there
should be agreement about the importance of protecting Iraq's
dwindling Christian community. This is one moral obligation America
should not break.
Doug Bandow is Vice President of Policy for Citizen
Outreach and author of Foreign Follies: America's New
Global Empire (Xulon Press). He is writing a book on religious
persecution abroad.
topics:
Business, Islam, Law, Military, Iraq, United Nations, Immigration