By National Catholic Register
Peter Jesserer Smith
The rainfall on Iraq’s Nineveh Plain promises a bountiful harvest of wheat and barley — and hopefully that bounty, in turn, will provide a bumper crop of economic benefits by drawing more people to the produce markets of Iraq’s Christian towns.
Peter Jesserer Smith
The rainfall on Iraq’s Nineveh Plain promises a bountiful harvest of wheat and barley — and hopefully that bounty, in turn, will provide a bumper crop of economic benefits by drawing more people to the produce markets of Iraq’s Christian towns.
Five years after the Islamic State terrorist group marked them for
genocide, many of Iraq’s Christians, like Yohanna Towaya, a resident of
Qaraquosh, have been making plans to rebuild the Christian presence
where it was first planted by St. Thomas the Apostle and his disciples
nearly 2,000 years ago.
But the fate of these rebuilding plans was 10 minutes away from being
decided for them. On June 21, President Donald Trump revealed that,
following Iran’s downing of a U.S. surveillance drone, Tomahawk missiles
were “cocked and loaded to retaliate.” An attack would have most
certainly meant a setback for Christian progress in neighboring Iraq.
In the drone incident, the U.S. claimed that the unmanned aircraft
(with an estimated cost between $110 and $220 million) shot down June 20
in the Strait of Hormuz was flying over international airspace, while
the Iranians claimed it invaded its airspace. The U.S. military has not
released records of the drone’s flight path to the media.
The incident is the latest to reflect the change in course of U.S.
policy toward Iran, beginning in 2018 with the breakdown of talks
between the two countries, after the Trump administration withdrew the
U.S. from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and imposed trade sanctions on
Iran. In response, Iran vowed to increase its production of uranium,
used for both the production of nuclear weapons and the development of
its nuclear-power program.
Trump, who campaigned in 2016 on the promise to stop U.S. engagement
in what he called “endless wars,” said during an interview with Fox Business Network that should war come, it would be brief and to the point:
“I’m not talking boots on the ground. I’m not talking we’re going to
send a million soldiers. I’m just saying if something would happen,
wouldn’t last very long.”
Fear of Instability
Although the U.S. airstrikes were called off because the estimated
loss of life was considered disproportionate, Trump’s tweet following
the canceled order sounded more like a stand-down than an overture for
peace.
“I am in no hurry, our military is rebuilt, new, and ready to go, by far the best in the world,” Trump tweeted.
Such indications reveal that tensions remain unresolved between Iran —
which makes no secret of its animosity against Israel and the West —
and the United States. The tension keeps Christians throughout the
Middle East on high alert, as the prospect of the U.S. and Iran going to
war presents a kind of catastrophe whose size and scope is difficult to
predict.
While the Trump administration estimated 150 people might have been
killed by U.S. strikes, Christians in the region fear a military
conflict between the U.S. and Iran could be the match that explodes what
remains of their presence in much of the Middle East.
“The people are fearful for the future,” Towaya said. “They’re not sure what will happen to them.”
Towaya explained that Shiite militias roam across northern Iraq,
making trouble for all who live there. Christians in their own towns are
protected by Christian militias, such as the Nineveh Protection Units,
allowing them to worship and live in relative freedom. But their Sunni
neighbors chafe under militias backed by Shiite Iran.
“The Sunni want the war to happen because it will finish off the influence of Iran on Iraq,” Towaya said.
As for the impact on Christians, he said, “We don’t know what the Shia militia will do in that region.”
The worst-case scenario for them would be an Iranian-backed repeat of
what happened to Christians following the 2003 invasion of Iraq, when
their communities were attacked in retaliation for U.S. military action
in the country.
While Iraq’s Christians have experienced persecutions throughout
their nearly 2,000-year history in the region, the past 100 years have
seen the ancient community experience waves of genocide unequaled since
Tamerlane’s Mongol Horde nearly exterminated the Church in Iraq in the
14th century.
“Our fathers and grandfathers suffered more than us, and they stayed
with the earth,” Towaya said, referring to their agricultural-based
communities in the region.
Following ISIS’ campaign of genocide in 2014, though, only 30%-40% of
Christians have returned to their ancestral villages, and many are
waiting to see whether they can live in peace and security. He predicted
that if something goes wrong, “all the people will leave.”
“If conflicts start between Iran and the U.S.,” he said, “it’ll be catastrophic for Christians.”
Fear of the Unknown
Christians in Syria also fear what will happen if the U.S. and Iran
go to war. Christians have benefited from the Syrian government’s
protection against the existential threat posed by Daesh,
al-Qaida spinoffs and other militant Islamic forces. But that security
owes much to Iran’s military assistance and the firepower of the
militias it sponsors.
Melkite Archbishop Jean-Clement Jeanbart of Aleppo, Syria, told the
Register that the Syrian people, not just the Christians, needed the
Iranian government and U.S. government to find a compromise so people
“could live their lives in peace.”
The archbishop said the situation for Christians remaining in Syria
is stable, but he said there is great anxiety that the U.S. and Israel
will target Syria as an ally of Iran and in doing so could unleash
extremist forces and bloodletting that would provoke Christians to leave
the country.
“You do not know what could be involved,” he said.
The archbishop explained that Christians will return to Syria if they
can have peace and the economy is rebuilt to provide them opportunities
to flourish. But that proposition is difficult if people fear a lack of
food and work — and conscription into a war that cannot be won.
Unlike the 2003 invasion of an isolated Iraq by a U.S.-led
multinational coalition, Iran is not isolated and has alliances
throughout the region. An Iran-U.S. war, he feared, would have instant
repercussions.
“For everyone in the Middle East, it will be a kind of hell,” he said. “People will not be able to control the situation.”
Ready to Blow
Conflict between the U.S. and Iran could end up drawing in Sunni-Arab
Gulf states, such as Saudi Arabia, Yemen (which is fighting its own
civil war) and the United Arab Emirates, as well as Israel, on the one
hand, and Iran’s allies and proxies, including Syria and the Lebanese
Shiite militia Hezbollah, on the other.
One of the major casualties could be Lebanon, which is the only
country in the Middle East where the head of state is a Christian and
where individuals have freedom to change their religion.
Habib Malik, a history and cultural studies professor at Lebanese
American University, based in Beirut and Byblos, told the Register that
Middle East Christians could end up suffering as collateral damage in a
war between the U.S. and Iran.
Malik said that if Iran experiences a “massive crippling blow early
on,” he doubted Hezbollah would make any kind of move against Israel.
But if Iran stood its ground and found it could survive a U.S. attack,
then Hezbollah would respond asymmetrically through its regional proxies
acting on their behalf through insurgencies and terrorist-style attacks
targeting not only military forces but also civilian populations.
Hezbollah is an ally of Iran, but Malik explained that even though it
may enter the war through its proxies to defend its ally, it is not
itself in a favorable position to open a major front for Iran against
Israel. Fighting in the Syrian Civil War has inflicted significant
casualties on Hezbollah over the years.
In the last six months, Israel has discovered and destroyed tunnels
prepared by Hezbollah for a surprise attack from the Lebanese border. In
addition, Hezbollah’s support from the Lebanese population is doubtful,
especially if they are blamed for plunging the country into ruin on the
orders of Iran. Hezbollah can also count on no funds from Syria or Iran
to rebuild.
“It really all depends on what happens in the first 24 to 48 hours in
Iran,” he said. “Should they start something in Lebanon, Israel’s
retaliation against them and Lebanon will be massive.”
Striving for Better
Malik said the Trump administration, at the very least, has voices
within it that are more sensitive to the issues faced by Christians in
the Middle East, and he’s hoping that those voices can influence the
administration in any action regarding Iran. But these voices must
contend with pro-military intervention voices in Trump’s administration,
including National Security Advisor John Bolton, who helped lead the
charge in the two Bush administrations’ decision to go to war in the
Middle East.
Malik said keeping Lebanon intact as “the freest society in the Arab
world,” thanks to the presence of “the last indigenous and free
Christians in the entire region,” remains in the U.S.’s vital strategic
interests.
If Lebanon, delicately balanced among its Sunni, Christian and Shiite
populations, were to collapse under the weight of another regional war,
Malik said, it would not just devastate the Christian community, but
also be the loss of a voice for real “freedom” in the Arab world.
Wadih Daher runs Stream of Hope Mission, which supports the Lebanese
bishops’ pastoral activity in Zahle and aid to refugees. He pointed out
that Lebanon’s unity is tethered to the conflict between Iran and Saudi
Arabia and feared the government would fall apart if a war occurred.
“If the U.S. takes side with Saudi Arabia against Iran, this will
trigger a hatred situation among Sunnis and Shiites, and this will
result in increase of terrorism,” he said. “And the first victims would
be the Christians of Lebanon.”
The risk of conflict is that Lebanon and the other countries will
empty of Christians. But if the U.S. strives to cultivate a good
relationship with Iran, Daher said, it could reduce tensions between
Saudi Arabia and Iran and between the Sunni and Shiites, allowing
Christians to live in peace.
He said, “We all need the U.S. to be an honest player in bringing all countries together and reduce these tensions.”