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Tag Archives: Syria

Islam: Power as Motivation

10 Wednesday Feb 2016

Posted by michelinewalker in Middle East, Terrorism

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

Autocracy, Nimr al-Nimr, Petroleum, Quest for Power, Raif Badawi, Saudi Arabia, Sharia Law, Syria

_78894787_grievingnan_hero

Syria (BBC/Reuters)

Raif Badawi
Raif Badawi
Nimr al-Nimr
Nimr al-Nimr

 

A few weeks ago, I attempted to publish a post on the Syrian Civil War. I was at a bit of a loss, but one of our colleagues suggested helpful reading. I thank him sincerely.

The link below leads to a brief account of the war in Syria, produced by the BBC. It is not as fresh an account as I would like it to be, but it is a concise and, I believe, accurate account.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-26116868

A Literal vs a Liberal Interpretation

Canada has been welcoming refugees from Syria. However, the Civil War in Syria is part of a larger problem and it has multiple origins, not all of which constitute interference and intervention on the part of the West. Much of this problem is endemic as many of these countries are autocracies where law is faith and faith is law. It’s called the Sharia law and it may be applied to oppress the innocent and the powerless who should be protected under the terms of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. For instance, it can be extremely useful to dictators as well as terrorist organizations. They can destroy lives with a clear conscience by choosing a literal, not to say distorted, interpretation of Sharia law.

That is how countries in the Midde East differ from one another. Some countries choose a liberal interpretation of Sharia law. Some don’t. If the power of a leader is threatened, a literal reading of Sharia law may save him. He clamps down. In other words, the countries of the Middle East are autocracies buttressed by a legal system that is also a religion and, in certain countries, such as Saudi Arabia, empowered by money. Petrolium is a product other countries need.

Let’s take a closer look.

DP234078

 A Stallion, painting by Habibalah of Save (active ca. 1590-1610) Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY

Metropolitan

Lady Holding a Flower, painting by Muhammadi of Herat (active Qazvin, c. 1570-1578; Herat, c. 1578-87) Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY

(for further information, please click on the titles below)
The Stallion, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Portrait of a Lady Holding a Flower, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Arab Spring

  • The Islamic Revolution (late 1970s-  early 1980s)
  • The Arab Spring (2010)

The Arab Spring is our starting-point. The Arab Spring was a series of uprisings that started on 18 December 2010 in Tunisia, with the Tunisian Revolution. Muslims attacked autocracy much as it was attacked at the time of the Islamic Revolution (late 1970s early 1980s). But unlike the Islamic Revolution, which saw the demise of the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, the Arab Spring did not invite the atavistic Islamism that has led to the growth of Isil/Daesh and the frenzied use of Sharia law in Saudi Arabia.

On the contrary, the Arab Spring invited a more liberal interpretation of Islam’s sacred texts. Religious texts are open to interpretation. They demand exegesis which is “a critical explanation or interpretation of a text, particularly a religious text.” (See Exegesis, Wikipedia.) The response to the Arab Spring was not “a critical explanation or interpretation of a text,” the Qur’an and the Hadith, but a stricter interpretation of a text.

Justice, real justice, can be served without beheadings, mutilation, torture and wrongful detention. On 21 August 2013, Bashar al-Assad allegedly ordered the use of a chemical weapon, sarin, that killed hundreds of innocent Syrians and, among them, many children. The victims may have been Sunni Muslims, but although he is an Alawite Shiite, Assad is westernized and he is married to the British-born daughter of Sunni Muslims whom he met when he was studying ophthalmology in London.

His reaction was not that of a God-loving Alawite Shia Muslim, but that of a despot. Assad dug in his heels to protect his position as President of Syria. He could have introduced some measure of democracy, but he chose otherwise and he seems to have relinquished part of Syria to the so-called Islamic State, or was it taken from him?

Members of Daesh/Isil behead, mutilate, stone to death, burn people alive, drown people alive. They crucify, torture, enslave, rape, &c, on what is still Syrian soil. How can the people of Syria survive wedged between attacks from rebel factions and raids by Daesh? Allah does not approve.

Sharia Law

  • Raif Badawi.
  • Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr

Consequently, although it may seem like a pious observance of Islam’s laws, the imprisonment of Raif Badawi and the execution in early January 2016 of Sheik Nimr al-Nimr and 46 other detainees, was not altogether deference to a prophet. King Salman of Saudi Arabia, a Whahhabi Sunni Muslim, was protecting his absolute monarchy and to do so, he put Sharia law into his own service: to rule unopposed. Raif Badawi, a Shia Muslim, imprisoned and he may be flogged again because he asked for more liberalism in Saudi Arabia. In fact, Raif Badawi may be executed. He has been moved to an area of the prison in which he is held where detainees await execution. Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr was also advocating more tolerance, but loudly.

As I suggested above, sharia law is a gift to dogmatic leaders in the Arab world. Making conflicts look sectarian also benefits our belligerents: Sunnis are battling Shiites and Shiites are battling Sunnis, Islam’s two main branches is very useful. It takes blame away from perpetrators. They keep Sharia law at their fingertips. Sharia law is the mask behind which these tyrants stand.

If one has read Molière’s Tartuffe (1664 to 1669), one knows that Tartuffe’s devotion is a mask he wears to seduce Orgon’s wife, using casuistry. Orgon is the name of the head of the household. All members of Orgon’s family know that Tartuffe is an impostor, but Orgon needs someone who can take sin out of sinning, which is Sharia law‘s main virtue. Tartuffe makes is possible for Orgon to be a tyrant. So does Sharia law.

Conclusion

The debate has been to determine whether the conflicts in the Middle East are secular (wordly) rather than sectarian (religious). In the Middle East, were it possible, separating faith and fate would probably help quell atrocities. But it would have to come from within. As noted above, to a large extent, Sharia law is a violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

But it appears we have a new Hitler. 

Hitler invaded other countries and killed 6,000,000 Jews as well as people he looked upon as ‘abnormal’, by his standard. At this point, I find it very difficult not to compare the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis to atrocities perpetrated by Isil/Daesh. Nazism was a cancer and so is Daesh/Isil.

So far, fewer people have died in the conflict in Syria than Jews in Hitler’s death camps, but the life of those who have fled has been taken from them. Various countries are taking in refugees, but refugees have lost their home.

In short, although the West went on Crusades in the Middle East, although Western countries were “protectorates” and partitioned Palestine as if it were theirs to partition, at the centre of crises in the Middle East is a thirst for power and for blood. Lives do not matter. Limbs do not matter, and Allah is a mere tool in the hands of tyrants, which is a sin.

However, it remains our duty to let the countries of the Middle East determine their future, to respect their wish for self-determination as well as their culture, when it does not infringe upon basic human rights, formulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

A new Hitler and rekindled Fascism.

We do have a new Hitler and rekindled fascism: Isil/Daesh, that must be neutralized or eliminated. In an earlier post, I suggested starvation: no weapons, no food &c.  Others probably have better solutions than my humble: don’t give them weapons.

Therefore, allow me to repeat that the Prophet Muhammad’s teaching can be encapsulated in his “mercy to all the creation.”

RELATED ARTICLES

  • Islam: “Mercy to all the Creation” (30 December 2015)
  • http://www.britannica.com/story/tensions-rise-between-iran-and-saudi-arabia
  • http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-26116868

With my kindest regards to everyone. ♥

 

Dance performance by Shahrokh Moshkin-Ghalam, dancer, choreographer, actor in La Comédie-Française
‘Faryad’ from “Dance variations on Persian themes”

_78894787_grievingnan_hero
© Micheline Walker
10 February 2016
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“… the humble pay the cost.”

29 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by michelinewalker in Animals in Literature, Fables, The Middle East

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Jean de La Fontaine, Phaedrus, Refugees, Syria, The Humble Pay the Cost, The Middle East

Plate_facing_page_130,_An_Argosy_of_Fables

“The Frogs and the Fighting Bulls” by Paul Bransom (Photo credit: An Argosy of Fables)

   “While the mighty quarrel, the humble pay the cost.”

I chose today’s subject matter, an Aesopian fable entitled “The Frogs and the Fighting Bulls,” because it brings to mind the plight of Syrians seeking refuge in a reticent Europe.

Four million Syrians have fled their country because their homes, if they are still standing, are not habitable and their government is no longer operative. Syria is a battlefield.

Where have the Mighty been? And will the Mighty now sit at a table and do their very best to fix the problem. I fear they may be politicians first and statesmen second, if ever they become statesmen, and “let the humble pay the cost.”

My kindest regards to all of you. ♥

5334-004-290F36C5

Aesop, with a fox, from the central medallion of a kylix, c. 470 BCE; in the Gregorian Etruscan Museum, Vatican City. 600 BCE – 501 BCE (Photo credit: the Encyclopaedia Britannica)

The Perry Index of Aesopian Fables

In the Perry Index of Aesopian fables, “The Frog and the Fighting Bulls” is fable number 485 and is entitled: “The Frogs Dread the Battle of the Bulls.” Its source is Phaedrus (1st century CE) but I borrowed the text from An Argosy of Fables, 1921 (p. 130), selected by Frederic Taber Cooper (1864 – 1937) and illustrated by Paul Bransom (1885 – 1979). However, this post includes Jean de La Fontaine’s[1] “Les Deux Taureaux et une Grenouille” and its English translation: “The Two Bulls and the Frog.” 

You may remember that Phaedrus (1st century CE)[2] is the Latin author who versified Aesop‘s[3] fables, thereby removing them from an oral tradition. (See Oral-formulaic composition, Wikipedia). Babrius (2nd century CE) also took Aesopian fables away from oral literature but he wrote Aesop’s fables in the Greek language.

Subsequent writers of fables have used both Phaedrus and Babrius to publish Aesopian fables in Latin or Greek, or French, or English, or other languages. We are reading a translation of Phaedrus’ Latin collection, but Frederic Taber Cooper has not provided his readers with the name of a translator.

The Frogs and the Fighting Bulls

A FROG, sitting at the edge of a swamp, was watching a battle between two Bulls in an adjoining field. “Alas! what deadly danger threatens us,” he said. Another Frog, overhearing him, asked what he meant, when the Bulls were merely fighting to decide which should lead the herd, and the cattle passed their lives quite apart from the home of the Frogs. “It is true,” rejoined the first Frog, “that they are a different race and live apart from us. But whichever Bull is beaten and driven from his leadership in the woods will come to find some secret hiding place; and I fear that many of us will be trampled to pieces under his hard hoofs. That is why I say that their battle means death and destruction to us.”

When the mighty quarrel, the humble pay the cost.

(Phaedrus, Fables, Vol. I, No. 30.)
 An Argosy of Fables, p. 100

Les Deux Taureaux et une Grenouille

Deux Taureaux combattaient à qui posséderait.
Une Génisse avec l’empire.
Une Grenouille en soupirait:
« Qu’avez-vous ? se mit à lui dire
Quelqu’un du peuple croassant.
Et ne voyez-vous pas, dit-elle,
Que la fin de cette querelle
Sera l’exil de l’un ; que l’autre, le chassant,
Le fera renoncer aux campagnes fleuries ?
Il ne régnera plus sur l’herbe des prairies,
Viendra dans nos marais régner sur les roseaux,
Et nous foulant aux pieds jusques au fond des eaux,
Tantôt l’une, et puis l’autre, il faudra qu’on pâtisse
Du combat qu’a causé Madame la Génisse. »
Cette crainte était de bon sens.
L’un des Taureaux en leur demeure
S’alla cacher à leurs dépens :
Il en écrasait vingt par heure.
Hélas! on voit que de tout temps
Les petits ont pâti des sottises des grands.

JEAN DE LA FONTAINE
Livre 2, fable 4

The Two Bulls and the Frog

Two bulls engaged in shocking battle,
Both for a certain heifer’s sake,
And lordship over certain cattle,
A frog began to groan and quake.
“But what is this to you?”
Inquired another of the croaking crew.
“Why, sister, don’t you see,
The end of this will be,
That one of these big brutes will yield,
And then be exiled from the field?
No more permitted on the grass to feed,
He’ll forage through our marsh, on rush and reed;
And while he eats or chews the cud,
Will trample on us in the mud.
Alas! to think how frogs must suffer
By means of this proud lady heifer!”
This fear was not without good sense.
One bull was beat, and much to their expense;
For, quick retreating to their reedy bower,
He trod on twenty of them in an hour.
Of little folks it often has been the fate
To suffer for the follies of the great.

JEAN DE LA FONTAINE
Book 2, Fable 4

DEUX-TAUREAUX

The Two Bulls and the Frog

RELATED ARTICLE

  • “Belling the Cat:” more Bells (30 July 2015)

Sources and Resources

  • Bestiaria Latina by Laura Gibbs (complete and authoritative)
  • La Fontaine’s Fables
  • Phaedrus is Gutenberg [EBook #25512]

____________________
[1] “Jean de La Fontaine”. Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2015. Web. 28 Sep. 2015
<http://www.britannica.com/biography/Jean-de-La-Fontaine>.

[2] “Aesop”. Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2015. Web. 27 Sep. 2015
<http://www.britannica.com/biography/Aesop>.

[3] “Phaedrus”. Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2015. Web. 27 Sep. 2015
<http://www.britannica.com/biography/Phaedrus-Roman-fabulist>.

—ooo—

“Agnus Dei,” Mass in C (The Coronation), K 337
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Kathleen Battle (soprano), Herbert von Karajan (conductor)

imagesKQQK6UE7© Micheline Walker
28 September 2014
WordPress

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Peace

20 Friday Sep 2013

Posted by michelinewalker in The Middle East

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Bashar al-Assad, clarification, exceptional nations, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Syria, the United Nations, the United States, war crime

picasso peace

Peace Dove, by Pablo Picasso, 1949 (Photo Credit: Google Images)

“After a strike, one can expect anything:” clarification

I received two comments from persons who did not understand the meaning of a quotation.  In an interview, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said that “after a strike, one can expect anything.”  The statement is not mine and it may be unclear.

After a strike, i.e. the gassing to death by sarin of 1,429 Syrian citizens, by forces under the command of Bashar al-Assad, Syrian President Assad can expect anything: retaliation.

Similarly after a “punitive” strike on Syria by the United States, the United States can expect retaliation on the part of ?

Strike A:  Assad on Syria (civil war) = Strike B:  the US on Assad

Danger: Since President Assad is a protégé of Russian President Vladimir Putin, we do not know who would strike after strike B, but in all likelihood, there would be retaliation and Assad may be helped by his ally, Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Strike C = unknown

Assad: “You can expect everything.”
http://www.lemonde.fr/proche-orient/video/2013/09/09/bachar-al-assad-attendez-vous-a-tout_3473648_3218.html
 

“Exceptional” Nations

Because of its status as a “superpower” the United States is currently expected to intervene in the Syrian crisis.  Therefore, at the moment, the US’ status as superpower is placing a heavy and perhaps unfair burden on US President Barack Obama and on his people.

Moreover, the US has now been called an “exceptional” nation, which would give it not only the right to strike but also the responsibility to do so.  Is this acceptable?

http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Fundamentally-Freund-Yes-Mr-Putin-America-is-exceptional-326415

A War Crime

However, on 16 September 2013, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon  reported that it had been determined by the United Nations that 1,429 Syrian citizens were gassed to death near Damascus, on 21 August 2013.  This is a “war crime.”  Therefore, it would be my opinion that matters have changed.  It is now official that Assad’s forces acted in violation of an international law. Theoretically, this is a matter for the United Nations to deal with.

http://webtv.un.org/watch/ban-ki-moon-syria-security-council-media-stakeout-16-september-2013/2676128008001/

The Last Post on the Syrian Crisis

I did not intend to write a post on Syria today.  In fact, I did not intend to write any more posts on the Syrian crisis.  This link will take you to the latest development:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2013/09/19/an-e-mail-to-the-united-states-from-syrian-president-bashar-al-assad/

I will close by saying that I grieve profoundly for those who have had to flee Syria, for those who have been prevented from fleeing Syria, and for the families and friends of those who were gassed to death.

* * *

Joseph Haydn (31 March 1732 – 31 May 1809)
Cello Concerto No. 1 in C major, H. 7b-1- Adagio
Jacqueline du Pré (26 January 1945 – 19 October 1987)
 
picasso-pablo-dove-of-peace© Micheline Walker
September 20, 2013
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The Syrian Crisis & the United Nations

19 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by michelinewalker in The Middle East

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Ban Ki-moon, diplomatic solution, exceptional nations, John Kerry, Lex Talionis, retaliation, Syria, The Middle East, United Nations, Vlaldimir Putin

1379449220988.cached 

Vladimir Putin

(Photo credit: Valeriy Melnikov/Host Photo Agency via Getty)
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/17/mckeon-responds-to-putin-in-the-moscow-times.html
 

Retaliation or the Lex Talionis 

Life teaches us not to let ourselves be provoked.  Indignation has its place, but if someone gets angry, it is best to leave the room and let that person simmer down.  Whether or not he or she is right or wrong, the first response to anger may well be to get out of harm’s way.

Retaliation, the lex talionis, an eye for an eye, is at times applicable.  For instance, Assad may have to compensate the Syrian citizens who have left the country and the families of those who have been killed.  However, in all likelihood, retaliation, i.e. a strike on the part of the US, would, at the moment, make matters worse.

When George W Bush entered Iraq, he entered a sovereign nation.  This was a transgression.  We may therefore be witnessing an instance of retaliation (lex talionis).

Using Chemical Weapons: “war Crime”

However, forces under Bashar al-Assad’s command now stand accused of a “war crime.”  The use of chemical weapons, weapons of mass destruction, is a criminal violation of international law.  Given that Assad’s forces killed indiscriminately 1,429 Syrian citizens using a chemical weapon, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad may have to face the International Court of Justice, at The Hague, as may Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Matters have changed

In other words, on 16 September 2013, when the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, reported that sarin gas had been used, matters changed.  It is now for a united world to act.  A strike on the part of the United States may no longer be the appropriate course of action.

http://webtv.un.org/watch/ban-ki-moon-syria-security-council-media-stakeout-16-september-2013/2676128008001/

US Secretary of State John Kerry

US Secretary of State John Kerry pared the problem down to the use of a chemical weapon, the “war crime.”  In an “off-the-cuff” remark, John Kerry stated that if Syria put its chemical weapons under international control and destroyed them, there would not be a strike on the part of the United States.  The world welcomed this idea, including Ban Ki-moon, the Secretary-General of the United Nations.

The Deal of a lifetime

In the meantime, as mentioned above, it has been determined by the United Nations that Bashar al-Assad’s forces used sarin, a chemical weapon, to kill 1,429 Syrian citizens.  On 16 September 2013, Ban Ki-moon, reported that a “war crime” had been committed.  If it is acceptable to the international community, Mr Kerry’s deal may be the deal of a lifetime for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.  At any rate, President Assad has accepted to put his chemical weapons under international control.  They will be destroyed.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/19/syria-chemical-weapons-bashar-al-assad-tv-interview

The US viewed as “exceptional”

http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Fundamentally-Freund-Yes-Mr-Putin-America-is-exceptional-326415

According to Michael Freund of the Jerusalem Post, “America is truly different, both because of its principles and its performance on the world stage.”  The United States has been and remains a superpower, but should the world entertain the notion that certain states are exceptional?  This concept warrants serious analysis.

For one thing, the US’ status as “superpower” has been a burden on US President Barack Obama and his nation.

::

RELATED ARTICLES

  • Syria
  • Syria, cont’d
  • Syria on my Mind
  • “After a strike, one can expect anything.”
  • The Agreement and the Criminal Element
Felix Mendelssohn (3 February 1809 –  4 November 1847)
Song without Words, opus 109
Jacqueline du Pré (cello)
 
449px-Mendelssohn_BartholdyPortrait of Felix Mendelssohn by the English miniaturist James Warren Childe (1778–1862), 1839
Photo credit: Wikipedia
(Please click on the image to enlarge it.)
 
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September 18, 2013
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“After a strike, one can expect anything.”

15 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by michelinewalker in The Middle East, United States

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Barack Obama, Bashar al-Assad, Frédéric Chopin, John Kerry, one can expect anything, Pablo Picasso, Syria, Vladimir Putin

olga-in-a-hat-with-feather-1920.jpg!Blog

Olga in a Hat with Feather, 1920[i]
Olga au chapeau à la plume
(Photo credit: Wikipaintings)
Artwork: Pablo Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973)
 

On Thursday, I went to Montreal to share lunch with a friend of many years.  She had come from Ottawa and I, from Sherbrooke.  Our friendship dates back to the year I studied in Montreal.  We did, of course, discuss the weather and spent an hour or so shopping.  But we then found a café and simply talked.  We discussed Pauline Marois, the current “separatist” premier of Quebec.  I told my friend that a few months ago Pauline Marois had hired someone to identify the wrongs currently inflicted on Quebec by Ottawa.  My comment put an end to that part of the conversation.  We laughed.  However, I have since read that Pauline Marois and Justin Trudeau, the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, “may have just buried” separatism.

http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2013/09/12/michael-den-tandt-pauline-marois-may-have-just-buried-separatism-and-crowned-justin-trudeau/

Assad’s Agreement

We went on to speak about Syria.  We were both delighted that an “off-the-cuff” remark by US Secretary of State John Kerry (born 11 November 1943) had led Russian President Vladimir Putin (born 7 October 1952) to call on President Bashar al-Assad (born 11 September 1965) to put his chemical weapons under international control and to destroy them.  There is an end to this intervention, which is its main but very real virtue.  President Bashar al-Assad has warned that “after a strike, one can expect anything.”

http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/syria-chemical-weapons-deal-reached-by-u-s-and-russia-1.1835170

portrait-of-olga-1920_jpg!BlogPresident Barack Obama (born 4 August 1961) has been described as “ambivalent” by CNN’s Gloria Borger.  Given the events of the 2000s: two wars, a huge debt, not to mention the loss of life and limbs, one can understand why President Obama is a reticent warrior.  Had there been a strike on Syria, the US would have led an international coalition and no one would have entered Syria, a sovereign country.  Yet, a strike is dangerous.  President Assad has warned that “after a strike, one can expect anything.”

 

Portrait of Olga, 1920
(Photo credit: Wikipaintings)
 
 

The use of chemical weapons, i.e. weapons of mass destruction, is prohibited under international law.  Yet, on 21 August 2013, the Assad regime allowed 1,429 Syrians, including more than 400 children to be gassed to death.  Can the international community simply stand by?  Assad committed a crime and may have done so to draw the United States into a conflict with Syria and, possibly, with Russia.  I would prefer to dismiss the idea of a setup, but I suspect political wranglings on a larger rather than smaller scale.

cc303a442f57f291496ae467b65a8bf5woman-reading-olga-1920

Mother and Child, 1922 and Portrait of Olga reading, 1920 (Photo credit: Wikipaintings)
 

Despite its debt, the United States remains a “superpower” and it has a formidable arsenal.  But it is a weary superpower and, by and large, US citizens oppose any action that could lead to yet another war.  Consequently, President Obama had been seeking the support of Congress and that of his nation before entering into a military engagement: a strike.  But there has now been an agreement.  Russia has called on Syria to put its chemical weapons under international control and to destroy them and Syria has agreed to do as President Putin proposed.  So why is President Putin entertaining the thought of a possible strike?

The Security Council

Russian President Vladimir Putin is indeed urging the US to “‘obey’ international law and not strike Syria without the approval of the United Nations.”  On Thursday, 12 September 2013, he in fact “used the editorial pages of the New York Times to make his own personal address to the American people.”  How very noble, but confusing!  Again, hasn’t Russian President Vladimir Putin persuaded Syrian President Assad to put his chemical weapons under international supervision and to destroy them?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/10305483/Vladimir-Putin-warns-America-to-obey-international-law-over-Syria.html

As I wrote in my last post, Syria on my Mind, the UN may serve rather than hinder Assad’s regime.  If the Security Council votes in favour of a strike, Russia can veto that decision.  Moreover, China is one of the five nations that may veto “punitive” — I do not like that word — action against Syria.  The US owes China a fortune.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_veto_power

Back to Assad’s Agreement

I may be wrong, but I sense a motivation on the part of Russia to make itself a superpower intent on obstructing another or other superpower(s).  Therefore, it may be prudent on the part of the United States to concentrate on making sure Syria puts its chemical weapons under international supervision and destroys them, as President Assad has agreed to do.  I believe it would be wise on the part of the United States to insist that Assad keep his word or forever be mocked for lying to the world.

In other words, it would be my opinion that the US may be well-advised to pare the problem down to its smallest, yet enormous and central, component: the use of chemical weapons, weapons of mass destruction.  It just could be that Secretary of State John Kerry’s off-the-cuff remark can be used as an off-the-hook opportunity.

The Shoe is on the other foot

On my way home, I kept thinking that it was hugely arrogant of President Assad to be warning the international community that “after a strike, one can expect anything.”  The shoe is on the other foot.  President Bashar al-Assad has violated an international law by using chemical weapons to kill indiscriminately 1,429 citizens of his country.  It therefore seems that it is now the international community’s turn to tell President Assad that “after a strike, one can expect anything.”

Conclusion

Yet, as I wrote above, I believe that an intervention on the part of the United States should be limited to insisting that President Assad keep his word and put his chemical weapons under international supervision, ensuring they are destroyed.  As I have noted above,  Secretary of State John Kerry’s off-the-cuff remark and Assad’s compliance just may take the United States “off the hook.”  John  Kerry’s suggestion — that President Assad put his chemical weapons under international control — targets the offense, i.e. the use of a weapon of mass destruction, which, in my opinion, makes it an appropriate response.  Not only does such an intervention have a foreseeable end, but it also addresses Assad’s warning that “after a strike, one can expect anything.”

_________________________

[i] Olga Khokhlova, a Ballets Russes ballerina, married Pablo Picasso in 1918 and is the mother of his son Paulo.  The marriage was not a happy one.  The two separated in 1935, but Picasso would not consent to a divorce as Olga was entitled to one half of his wealth.  Olga died in 1955.

—ooo—

 
Frédéric Chopin (1 March 1810 – 17 October 1849)
Nocturne No. 11 in G Minor, Op. 371
pianist: unidentified
 
picasso peace© Micheline Walker
14 September  2013
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Syria, cont’d

04 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by michelinewalker in The Middle East, United States

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Aberdeen Bestiary, al-Assad, chemical weapons, interview, Le Figaro, provocation, Rwandan genocide, Syria, The Middle East, the United Nations, war as the greater evil

Declaration_independence

The Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776, by John Trumbull, 1817 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
John Drumbull  (6 June 1756 – 10 November 1843)
 

::

When I posted my previous article on Syria, I was afraid.  I thought that my colleagues at WordPress would not look upon my post as a call for peace.  I was wrong.  Many of my WordPress colleagues also think the US should not enter into war.  Banishing the use of chemical weapons can be addressed without entering into a military conflict.

However, I then watched CNN and heard many individuals express the view that America should saddle up — knights in shining armour — and enter Syria as though it were America’s mission to save the World.  It is not America’s mission to save the world and I still feel the gassing to death of 1,429 Syrians by fellow Syrians could be provocation.

Provocation

Given the confidence the Syrians are expressing, I suspect they have powerful allies.  It is therefore possible that the intended “narrow” intervention of a coalition led by the United States would escalate into a war and that the United States would again be seen as the “ugly American” who meddles into the affairs of the Middle East.  Under Barack Obama’s Presidency, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton won diplomatic victories that should not be jeopardized.

An Illegal Act of War

It is incumbent upon the World to make sure the “criminals” who gassed to death 1,429 innocent individuals are brought to justice.  “Punishing” criminals is legitimate.  Nobody wants a reenactment of the Rwandan genocide.  However, attacking a sovereign “nation” could be construed as an illegal act of war.

The International Community

Consequently, it remains my opinion and conviction, that the US should continue to leave the Middle East, where it has long been despised, and let the World deal with the criminal acts committed under al-Assad’s dictatorship.  The World has institutions, the UN and other agencies, whose duty it is to look after such matters.

I can understand that President Obama and his administration are motivated to intervene because 1,429 innocent individuals were gassed to death near Damascus.  But it could be that 1,429 innocent citizens were gassed to death so President Obama and his administration would be motivated to intervene?

All things considered and as horrible as this may sound, war is a greater evil than the despicable gassing to death of 1,429 individuals.  In the event of a war, there would soon be 14,429 victims, and then 144,299 victims.

Scene_at_the_Signing_of_the_Constitution_of_the_United_States

Howard Chandler Christy‘s Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States, 17 September 1787 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Howard Chandler Christy (10 January 1873 – 3 March 1952)
 

Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad was interviewed by France’s Le Figaro. 

“President Assad: From my perspective, power lies in your ability to prevent wars not in igniting them.  Power comes from ones ability to stand up and acknowledge their mistakes; if Obama was strong, he would have stood up and said that there is no evidence that the Syrian government used chemical weapons, he would have stood up and said that the right way forward is  to wait for the results of the UN investigations and work through the UN  Security Council. However, as I see it, he is weak because he succumbed to internal pressure from small groups and threatened military action.  As I said strong leaders are those who prevent wars not those who inflame them.
 
Malbrunot: What do you say to members of congress whose vote will determine whether or not there will be any military action?
 
President Assad:  Members of congress are entrusted to serve in the best interests of their country.  Before they vote, they need to weigh up their decision in the interests of their own country.  It is not in the interests of the US to perpetuate instability and extremism in the Middle East.  It is not in their interests to continue – what George Bush started – spreading wars in the world. 
 
If they think logically and in the interests of their country, they will not find any benefits to these wars.  However many of them they have not mastered the art of logic in their political decision-making.
 
Malbrunot: How will you respond to these strikes, should they happen?
 
President al-Assad: If we think of the Middle East as a barrel of explosives close to a fire that is coming ever closer, then it becomes clear that the issue is no longer contained to a Syrian response, but rather what will happen after the first strike. The architects of the war can define the first strike – in other words they can determine what they will do, but beyond that it is impossible for anyone to predict what will follow.  Once the barrel explodes, everyone loses control; nobody can determine the outcome, however what is certain is the spread of chaos, wars and extremism in all its forms everywhere.”
http://www.syriaonline.sy/?f=Details&catid=12&pageid=7073
 
 
 
140775904© Micheline Walker
4 September 2013
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Syria

01 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by michelinewalker in History, The Middle East

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Alex Colville, chemical weapons, congenital malfaesance, playing dead, provocation, Syria, The Middle East

 crusades (1)
 
Photo credit: The Emyoku Project and Google images
 

Battle-of-Ager-Sanguinis

The Battle of Ager Sanguinis, 1119
(Photo credit: Wikipedia)
 

Syria: the Use of Chemical Weapons

As reported by Secretary of State John Kerry, on 21 August 2013, Syria “gassed to death” 1,429 of its citizens including 426 children. It has therefore made it imperative for the entire world to stand up and oppose the death of innocent people.

President Obama is absolutely right: “We cannot accept a world where women and children and innocent civilians are gassed on a terrible scale.”

provocation

However, I now suspect a motivation on the part of Syria to provoke the West in general and the United States in particular into entering endless hostilities, as though the Crusades had not ended. This, I believe, was provocation: see agent provocateur.   Under such circumstances, the US needs to consider “playing dead.” Something has to be done, but it would be my opinion that the United States’ best option is to be part of an international mission and to address, with partners, the use of chemical weapons.[i] They kill quickly and may harm an already ailing planet.

9/11

Please remember the brutal attacks of 9/11. There had to be a response on the part of the United States.  However, these attacks were perpetrated by a global terrorist organisation: Al-Qaeda, led by Osama bin Laden. These attacks were not perpetrated by a nation. Therefore, President Bush’s best recourse was to track down Osama bin Laden, thereby

  •  sparing the United States and the world two wars
  •  while avoiding the near collapse of an economy that has gone global. He chose war and he spent trillions.

The Current Conflict

In the eyes of some US citizens, barging in to avenge the misdeeds of the Middle East might seem the “American” thing to do. Such a belief is rooted, at least in part, in the antiquated Manifest Destiny. But the truth is that the US does not have to solve the problems of the World. Moreover, I doubt that it can enter a sovereign nation. The Syrians killed 1,429 of their own people and it may well be that they were trying to provoke the West, especially the United States. However, although I suspect provocation, there was no attack on the United States. The temptation to enter Syria and punish the barbarians who killed 1,429 of their own citizens, using chemical weapons to boot, must be enormous. Yet no nation can elbow its way into another nation to teach it a lesson? The Syrians acted criminally and should face the International Court of Justice.

Negotiations

Moreover, may I suggest that one does not help those who will not help themselves.  It is the duty of the embattled countries of the Middle East to put an end to their own misery. These factious nations are perfectly capable of finding their way to the negotiating table, if there is anyone left. For instance, the United States has long tried to broker a deal that would be acceptable to both the Israeli and the Palestinians.  However, whatever deal has been proposed has also been opposed. So why try to resolve conflicts the belligerents themselves want to perpetuate? In the case of Syria, why should any nation punish the malfaesants who killed their own people? They may have wanted to infuriate the West, but in doing so they committed a horrible crime. They must face the consequences of this crime, but need it be war? There’s a tribunal.

Conclusion

Too intense a degree of engagement on the part of the United States in the conflicts of the Middle East would harm Americans and I doubt it would help the Middle East. I am not saying that the US should contemplate isolationism, but it would be my opinion and conviction that it should 1) continue to pull out of the Middle East, where it remains the “ugly American,” 2) let congenital belligerents face an indignant world and, 3) when a nation has acted criminally, make sure the concerned individuals are brought to trial.

I very much fear another war, the evil that followed 9/11. I’m so glad the White House is still Barack’s house.

______________________________

Sources:

[i] http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/obamas-bid-to-congress-on-syria-part-of-push-for-global-backing-un/article14065095/
[ii] http://www.cbc.ca/player/News/World/ID/2403722367/
 

::

Estampie, by Arany Zoltán

aranyzoltantroubadours

© Micheline Walker
1 September 2013
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