It's been exactly five years since President Bush gave the green light for the Iraq war, which, aside from toppling former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, has resulted in the disappearance of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Christians from their ancestral homeland.
(Photo: AP Images / Hadi Mizban)Iraqis attend Sunday mass at the Virgin Mary Chaldean Catholic church in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2007. About 3 percent of Iraq's estimated population of 26 million are Christians.
Bush, during his address Wednesday to mark the anniversary, declared that the war in Iraq must go on, arguing that the removal of Hussein from power was the right decision, according to CNN.
The president also acknowledged that criticisms of the war were understandable, but maintained that the United States can and must win.
"No one would argue that this war has not come at a high cost in lives and treasure, but those costs are necessary when we consider the cost of a strategic victory for our enemies in Iraq, Bush contended.
Nearly 4,000 American troops have died in the Iraq war.
But the conflict has also claimed many other victims, including a disproportionate number of Iraqi Christians.
Christians have always been a minority in Iraq, making up only about three percent of the countrys population before the U.S.-led offensive in 2003. But their numbers plummeted thereafter, dropping from 1.2 million before the war to about 600,000 currently remaining in the country.
Besides security and economic concerns shared by all Iraqis, Christians face the additional burden of being targeted by extremists who mostly kidnap them in exchange for ransom money. Kidnappers are said to believe that Iraqi Christians have relatives living abroad and can easily request financial help from relatives to meet the ransom demand.
However, other militants attack Christians because they falsely associate them with the West and U.S. forces, believing that since America and the West are Christian nations then Iraqi Christians must be their allies.
The situation continues to grow grimmer for the targeted minority Christian community in Iraq, commented Carl Moeller, president/CEO of Open Doors USA, in a statement prepared for the anniversary of the Iraq war. Pray that 2008 will be the year when the violence will decrease and Christians will not be killed and kidnapped simply for their belief in Christ.
Open Doors is one of the major providers of Bibles and Christian materials in Iraq. It is also working with displaced Christians in Iraq, Syria and Jordan to address their needs of housing, food, clothing and water.
Nina Shea, a commissioner with the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), recently criticized the Bush administration for not acknowledging that Christians and other defenseless minorities are persecuted because of their faith.
USCIRF is a bipartisan government agency assigned the task of monitoring religious freedom in the world and giving policy recommendations to the President, the Secretary of State and Congress.
No policies exist to address their (Christians and minorities) specific needs in Iraq or facilitate their finding refuge abroad, wrote Shea in the National Review earlier this month. No programs exist to train and support them to police their own villages more critical than ever now that the military surge has flushed terror northward.
No checks are in place to ensure that their villages in Nineveh and elsewhere in the north share equitably in U.S. largesse, she continued. No senior administration official has ever even met to hear the views of their American leaders as a group and forge solutions. Continue »










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