Syrian victims of Islamic State slaughter |
By Alan
Caruba
In the
last century and now this one, I have lived long enough to have been alive when
the Nazis killed six million European Jews and another five million other
“enemies of the state” that included unionists, homosexuals, Seventh Day
Adventists, and any others that ran afoul of that hateful and hate-filled
regime.
There were
genocides in the last and this century. The killing of Kurds by Saddam Hussein,
the Iraqi dictator who used poison gas—a weapon of mass destruction—against
them is largely forgotten by everyone but the Kurds.
In the
1990s there was a genocide in Rwanda by the Hutu tribe against the Tutsi
people. Hundreds of thousands were killed, most by machete. Reportedly rape,
mutilation, and the deliberate spread of disease were also used against them.
The final body count was estimated by some at well over a million.
In the
Middle East, the Islamic Ottoman Empire whose final years were directed from
what is now modern-day Turkey was responsible for the Armenian Genocide that
began in 1915. The Armenians were a Christian minority and what is occurring in
the land claimed by the new Islamic State (IS) reflects the same barbarity that
afflicted and killed between 600,000 and 1.8 million Armenians.
In Europe
following the fall of the Soviet Union and the former Yugoslavia, thousands of
Bosnian Muslims and Serbs were “ethnically cleansed” between 1990 and 1995.
Some twenty thousand were killed.
And now
the fanatical Islamic State that stretches from areas of northern Syria through
much of northern Iraq, just outside of Baghdad, is waging a systematic and
utterly barbaric genocide of the area’s Christians. They are killing Muslims
too.
And what
is the world doing? Virtually nothing.
The President of the most militarily powerful nation on Earth has dropped some “humanitarian” aid to thousands of Yazidis, an
ancient, little known group driven from their homes in northern Iraq where they
have lived for hundreds of years. Thousands of Christians were driven from
Mosul. There has been an increase in U.S. air attacks on IS forces, but a far greater effort will be needed to destroy this evil entity.
In Nigeria, Boko Haram, an Islamist terrorist group, is slaughtering
thousands.
Nigerian Christians killed by Boko Haram |
The Islamic State is now the most militarily powerful force in the Middle East
and one of the most wealthy. It threatens the Kurds who have finally begun to
receive weapons from the U.S.
What
President Obama should be doing is orchestrating a military coalition just as
George H.W. Bush did to drive Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait, but the fact is
that Europe is fearful of participating because it is now home to a large
population of Muslims. And it has economic problems comparable to our own.
In the
Middle East, Iraq has just managed to force the former Prime Minister out of
office and must now try to get all the threatened Sunnis and Shiites together to
fight for its own existence. Much of the U.S. weaponry given two divisions of
Iraqi military was abandoned to the IS when they fled from battle.
Meanwhile,
one never hears a word about the Saudis getting involved militarily as it has
been their preference to let us fight their enemies such as the former Saddam
Hussein. The border between Iraq and Saudi Arabia is a long one. They have a
real interest is helping destroy the Islamic State and so far its threat has
managed to bring together the Saudis, the Egyptians, and the Israelis, as
unusual a threesome has one might ever imagine.
One might
hardly expect the Iranians to get involved though they have been helping
Syria’s Bashar Assad with the provision of weapons. So have the Russians. The
fate of the region’s Christians is not likely a priority or concern of the
fanatical Shiite Iranians.
There is,
in fact, only one nation in the Middle East where Christians and Muslims are safe to practice
their religions. It is called Israel.
I can’t
help thinking this would be a good time for the Pope to call for a new crusade.
The
Christian genocide is continuing and
will continue unless some action can be put together to destroy the Islamic
State, Boko Haram, and similar groups. It is an Islamic crime against Christians and to some extent against
Muslims whom they deem insufficiently devout.
Ultimately,
however, it is a crime against humanity. And humanity is doing as little in
response to it than occurred prior to the Holocaust and other genocides.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
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