Real Clear Politics is featuring a number of critiques of Obama this  week.
True to form there also are some supportive essays, but when even
the Washington Post publishes a critical evaluation of BHO, you know
that something is rotten in Denmark.
 
_Military  Embarrassed by Obama's Amateurism_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/us-military-planners-dont-support-war-with-syria/2013/09/05/10a071
14-15bb-11e3-be6e-dc6ae8a5b3a8_story.html?wprss=rss_opinions)  - Robert 
Scales, Wash Post
_Obama  Is Deeply Unserious_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/article/357745/unserious-commander-chief-charles-krauthammer)
  - Charles Krauthammer, 
National Review
_Syria  Strike Won't Solve Obama's Crediblity Crisis_ 
(http://hotair.com/archives/2013/09/05/the-credibility-crisis-cant-be-solved-with-tomahawk-missile
s/)  - Ed Morrissey, Hot Air
_Obama  Loses Touch With Reality_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2013/09/04/in-stockholm-barack-obama-loses-touch-with-reality-syri/)
  - Peter 
Wehner, Commentary
_Barack Obama's Staggering Incompetence _ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2013/09/02/barack-obamas-staggering-incompetence/)
 - Peter Wehner, 
Commentary
 
 


Here is what means the most to me in this imbroglio  :
 
 
 
from the site:
The American Conservative
 
 
Syria’s Christians Risk Eradication
A post-Assad Islamist regime threatens to re-enact the Armenian  genocide.
By _Philip  Jenkins_ 
(http://www.theamericanconservative.com/author/philip-jenkins)  • _September 4, 
2013_ 
(http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/syrias-christians-risk-eradication/)
  

 
 
 
U.S. policy towards Syria is bafflingly inconsistent. If U.S. leaders are 
so  concerned about regimes slaughtering thousands of their own people, did 
they  notice what just happened in Egypt? If they are so exercised over about 
weapons  of mass destruction, are they aware that Israel has two hundred 
nuclear  warheads, with delivery systems? Will American warships in the region 
be making  those other stops on their liberating mission? 
Most puzzling of all, though, is why the United States seems so determined 
to  eradicate Christianity in one of its oldest heartlands, at such an 
agonizingly  sensitive historical moment. 
Syria has always been a complex place religiously. Although the country has 
a  substantial Sunni Muslim majority, it also has large minority  
communities—Christians, Alawites, and others—who together make up over a 
quarter  of 
the population. Those communities have survived very successfully in Syria  
for centuries, but the present revolution is a threat to their continued  
existence. 
Sadly, Westerners tend to assume that Arabs are, necessarily, Muslims, and  
moreover, that Muslims are a homogeneous bunch. Actually, 10 percent of 
Syrians  are Alawites, members of a notionally Islamic sect that actually draws 
heavily  from Christian and even Gnostic roots: they even celebrate 
Christmas. Locally,  they were long known as Nusayris, “Little Christians.” 
Syria 
is also home  to several hundred thousand Druze, who are even further 
removed from Sunni  orthodoxy. 
And then there are the Christians. If Christianity began in Galilee and  
Judea, it very soon made its cultural and intellectual home in Syria. St. Paul 
 famously visited Damascus, and for centuries Antioch was one of the world’
s  greatest Christian centers. (The city today stands just over the Turkish  
border.) A sizable Christian population flourished under Islamic rule, and  
continued under the Ottomans. Muslim and Christian populations always 
interacted  closely here. A shrine in Damascus’s Great Mosque claims to be the 
location of  John the Baptist’s head. 
Christian numbers fluctuated dramatically over time. A hundred years ago,  “
Syria,” broadly defined, was home to a large and diverse Christian 
population,  including Catholics, Orthodox, and Maronites. In the 1920s, the 
French  
arbitrarily carved out the country’s most Christian sections and designated 
that  region “Lebanon,” with its capital at Beirut. 
In theory, that partition should have drawn a clear line between Christian  
Lebanon and non-Christian Syria. But Syria itself was changing in the 
aftermath  of the catastrophic events of the First World War. The year 1915 
marked the  beginning of the horrendous genocide of perhaps 1.5 million 
Armenians, as well  as hundreds of thousands of Assyrians, Maronites, and other 
Christian groups.  After the war, Christians increasingly concentrated in 
Syria, 
where they  benefited from French protection. 
Arab Christians, though, were anything but imperial puppets. Determined to  
avoid a repetition of the horrors of 1915, Christians struggled to create a 
new  political order in which they could play a full role. This meant 
advocating  fervent Arab nationalism, a thoroughly secular order in which 
Christians and  other minorities could avoid being overwhelmed by the 
juggernaut 
power of Sunni  Islam. All Arab peoples, regardless of faith, would join in a 
shared passion for  secular modernity and pan-Arab patriotism, in stark 
contrast to reactionary  Islamism. The pioneering theorist of modern Arab 
nationalism was Damascus-born  Orthodox Christian Constantine Zureiq. Another 
Orthodox son of Damascus was  Michel Aflaq, co-founder of the Ba’ath 
(Renaissance) Party that played such a  pivotal role in the modern history of 
both Iraq 
and Syria. 
Since the 1960s, Syria has been a Ba’athist state, which in practice has  
meant the hegemony of the religious minorities who dominate the country’s  
military and intelligence apparatus. Hafez al-Assad (President from 1971 
through  2000) was of course an Alawite, but by the 1990s, five of his seven 
closest  advisers were Christian. His son Bashar is the current president, and 
America’s  nemesis in the region. 
Quite apart from their political influence, Christians have done very well  
indeed in modern Syria. Although they try to avoid drawing too much 
attention,  it is no secret that Aleppo (for instance) has a highly active 
Christian  population. Christian numbers have even grown significantly since 
the 
1990s, as  Iraqis fled the growing chaos in that country. Officially, 
Christians today make  up around 10 percent of Syria’s people, but that is a 
serious 
underestimate, as  it omits so many refugees, not to mention thinly 
disguised crypto-believers. A  plausible Christian figure is at least 15 
percent, or 
three million people. 
To describe the Ba’athist state’s tolerance is not, of course, to justify 
its  brutality, or its involvement in state-sanctioned crime and 
international  terrorism. But for all that, it has sustained a genuine refuge 
for 
religious  minorities, of a kind that has been snuffed out elsewhere in the 
region.  Although many Syrian Christians favor democratic reforms, they know 
all 
too well  that a successful revolution would almost certainly put in place a 
rigidly  Islamist or Salafist regime that would abruptly end the era of 
tolerant  diversity. Already, Christians have suffered terrible persecution in  
rebel-controlled areas, with countless reports of murder, rape, and  
extortion. 
Under its new Sunni rulers, minorities would likely face a fate like that 
in  neighboring Iraq, where the Christian share of population fell from 8 
percent in  the 1980s to perhaps 1 percent today. In Iraq, though, persecuted 
believers had  a place to which they could escape, namely Syria. Where would 
Syrian refugees  go? 
A month ago, that question was moot, as the Assad government was gaining 
the  upper hand over the rebels. At worst, it seemed, the regime could hold on 
to a  rump state in Syria’s west, a refuge for Alawites, Christians, and 
others. And  then came the alleged gas attack, and the overheated U.S. 
response. 
So here is the nightmare. If the U.S., France, and some miscellaneous 
allies  strike at the regime, they could conceivably so weaken it that it would 
 
collapse. Out of the ruins would emerge a radically anti-Western regime, 
which  would kill or expel several million Christians and Alawites. This would 
be a  political, religious, and humanitarian catastrophe unparalleled since 
the  Armenian genocide almost exactly a century ago. 
Around the world, scholars and intellectual leaders are debating how to  
commemorate the approaching centennial of that cataclysm in 2015. Through its  
utter lack of historical awareness, the United States government may be 
pushing  towards not a commemoration of the genocide but a faithful 
re-enactment. 
Even at this late moment, can they yet be brought to see reason? 
Philip Jenkins is Distinguished Professor of History at Baylor University  
and serves as Co-Director for the Program on Historical Studies of Religion 
in  the Institute for Studies of Religion.

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