Last week an Iraqi Muslim scholar issued a fatwa that, among other barbarities, asserts that “it is permissible to spill the blood of Iraqi Christians.” Inciting as the fatwa is, it is also redundant. While last October’s Baghdad church attack which killed some sixty Christians is widely known—actually receiving some MSM coverage—the fact is, Christian life in Iraq has been a living hell ever since U.S. forces ousted the late Saddam Hussein in 2003.
Among other atrocities, beheading and crucifying Christians are not irregular occurrences; messages saying “you Christian dogs, leave or die,” are typical. Islamists see the church as an “obscene nest of pagans” and threaten to “exterminate Iraqi Christians.” John Eibner, CEO of Christian Solidarity International, summarized the situation well in a recent letter to President Obama:
The threat of extermination is not empty. Since the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s regime, more than half the country’s Christian population has been forced by targeted violence to seek refuge abroad or to live away from their homes as internally displaced people. According to the Hammurabi Human Rights Organization, over 700 Christians, including bishops and priests, have been killed and 61 churches have been bombed. Seven years after the commencement of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Catholic Archbishop Louis Sako of Kirkuk reports: “He who is not a Muslim in Iraq is a second-class citizen. Often it is necessary to convert or emigrate, otherwise one risks being killed.” This anti-Christian violence is sustained by a widespread culture of Muslim supremacism that extends far beyond those who pull the triggers and detonate the bombs.
The grand irony, of course, is that Christian persecution has  increased exponentially under U.S. occupation. As one top Vatican  official put it, Christians, “paradoxically, were more protected  under the dictatorship” of Saddam Hussein.
What does one make of this—that under Saddam, who was notorious for  human rights abuses, Christians were better off than they are under a  democratic government sponsored by humanitarian, some would say  “Christian,” America?
Like a Baghdad caliph, Saddam appears to have made use of the better  educated Christians, who posed no risk to his rule, such as his close  confidant Tariq  Aziz. Moreover, by keeping a tight lid on the Islamists of his  nation—who hated him as a secular apostate no less than the  Christians—the latter benefited indirectly.
Conversely, by empowering “the people,” the U.S. has unwittingly  undone Iraq’s Christian minority. Naively projecting Western values on  Muslims, U.S. leadership continues to think that “people-power” will  naturally culminate into a liberal, egalitarian society—despite all the evidence  otherwise. The fact is, in the Arab/Muslim world, “majority rule”  traditionally means domination by the largest tribe or sect;  increasingly, it means Islamist domination.
Either which way, the minorities—notably the indigenous  Christians—are the first to suffer once the genie of “people-power” is  uncorked. Indeed, evidence  indicates  that the U.S. backed “democratic” government of Iraq enables and  incites the persecution of its Christians. (All of this raises the  pivotal question: do heavy-handed tyrants—Saddam, Mubarak, Qaddafi, et  al—create brutal societies, or do naturally brutal societies create the  need for heavy-handed tyrants to keep order.)
Another indicator that empowering Muslim masses equates Christian  suffering is the fact that, though Iraqi Christians amount to a mere  five percent of the population, they make up nearly 40 percent of the refugees fleeing Iraq. It is the same in  Egypt: “A growing number of Egypt’s 8-10 million Coptic Christians  are looking for a way to get out as Islamists increasingly take  advantage of the nationalist revolution that toppled long-standing  dictator Hosni Mubarak in February.”
Of course, whereas Egypt’s revolution  was homegrown, the persecution of Iraq’s Christians is a direct  byproduct of U.S. intervention. More ironic has been Obama’s approach.  Justifying his decision to intervene in Libya in humanitarian  terms, the president recently said  that, while “it is true that America cannot use our military wherever  repression occurs… that cannot be an argument for never acting on behalf  of what’s right.”
True, indeed. Yet, even as Obama “acts on behalf of what’s right,” by  providing military protection to the al-Qaeda  connected Libyan opposition, Iraq’s indigenous Christians continue  to be exterminated—right under the U.S. military’s nose in Iraq. You  see, in its ongoing bid to win the much coveted but forever elusive “Muslim-hearts-and-minds™”—which  Obama has even tasked NASA  with—U.S. leadership ignores the inhumane treatment of Islam’s  “Christian dogs,” the mere mention of which tends to upset  Muslims.