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Seminary Rector Rues US Intervention In Iraq, Says Syrian Rebels Hav

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  • Seminary Rector Rues US Intervention In Iraq, Says Syrian Rebels Hav

    SEMINARY RECTOR RUES US INTERVENTION IN IRAQ, SAYS SYRIAN REBELS HAVE LITTLE INTEREST IN DEMOCRACY

    Catholic Culture
    Sept 3 2013

    CWN - September 03, 2013

    The rector of the Pontifical Armenian College in Rome has told the
    Aleteia news site that the Syrian rebels have little interest in
    promoting democracy.

    "We see 'democrats' who enjoy cutting off the heads of their
    opponents, eating the hearts of faithful soldiers, firing on truck
    drivers who don't know the [Muslim] morning and evening prayers,"
    said Msgr. Georges Noradounguian.

    Turning to the topic of possible American military intervention,
    the priest added, "If Syrian forces had attacked Iran with chemical
    weapons, would the reaction of the international community today be
    the same?"

    Comparing American military intervention to totalitarianism, he said:

    Often we realize too late that the support given to wars for freedom
    and democracy was misplaced and actually achieved the opposite
    objectives.

    >From the time the war on terror was declared, terrorism has been
    spread even further. From the time we began to speak about the danger
    of the extremists, they have multiplied and spread everywhere. From
    the time talk of dictatorial, totalitarian systems began, we've gone
    from petty dictators on a smaller scale with more limited negative
    consequences, to a time and place of large scale dictators with
    catastrophic consequences. There is a totalitarianism that is imposed
    with force against one's own citizens, and then there are totalitarian
    regimes that impose themselves on countries and entire populations,
    through economic and military power, by planning and financing wars ad
    infinitum, and by delineating red lines: the use of chemical weapons
    or weapons' mass destruction.

    Msgr. Noradounguian called upon the West to "make a serious examination
    of conscience; reread the wars of the last 20 years and learn the
    lesson from them. Were these wars consistent in their goals and
    results? Is Iraq free and democratic? ... Are there less victims now,
    after the war in Iraq and after the fall of the regime, than at the
    time of the dictator?"

    "Naturally I'm not in favor of dictators," he continued. "But my
    question as a Christian is this: Is the one million casualties and
    the destabilization of a country really the only way and the only
    price to be paid for getting rid of a dictator?"

    "Christians find themselves facing not good choices but rather harsh
    realities," he continued. "What happened to the Christians in Turkey?

    And the Christians in Iraq, where are they? And the Christians in
    Egypt, where are they? What are they living through? Christians in
    Syria see the absurd, false wars that lead to the destabilization
    and destruction of their countries and force them to migrate to
    unknown destinations to start their lives from a scratch, from zero,
    and abandon the countries that hold their history and their culture
    and their Christian identity and their work."

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=18910

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