By ilana mercer
On just about every issue, in 2016, candidate Trump ran in opposition to Sen. Lindsey Graham. Donald Trump won the presidency; Lindsey Graham quit the race with a near-zero popularity, as reflected in the polls.
The People certainly loathe the senator from South Carolina. A poll conducted subsequently found that Graham was among least popular senators.
No wonder. Graham is reliably wrong about most things.
But being both misguided and despised have done nothing to diminish Sen. Grahamโs popularity with Big Media, left and right. Thus were his pronouncements accorded the customary reverence, during a July 10 segment, on Fox News’ โThe Story.โ
Which is when he told anchor Martha MacCallum that, โPutin is not doing anything good in Syria.โ
Then again, Lindsey is being consistent. The revival of โone of the worldโs oldest Christian communities,โ in Syria, is not something the senator weโve come to know and loathe would celebrate.
Itโs true. โA new Syria is emerging from the rubble of war,โ reports The Economist, a magazine which is every bit as liberal and Russophobic as Graham and his political soul mate, John McCain, but whose correspondents on the groundโin Aleppo, Damascus and Homsโhave a far greater fidelity to the truth than the terrible two.
โIn Homs, โฆย the Christian quarter is reviving. Churches have been lavishly restored; a large crucifix hangs over the main street.” โGroom of Heaven,โ proclaims a billboard featuring a photo of a Christian soldier killed in the seven-year conflict. And, in their sermons, Orthodox patriarchs praise Mr. Assad for saving โฆ the Christian communities.โ
Donโt tell the ailing McCain. Itโll only make him miserable, but thanks to Putin, Assad โnow controls Syriaโs spine, from Aleppo in the north to Damascus in the southโwhat French colonists once called la Syrie utile (useful Syria). The rebels are confined to pockets along the southern and northern borders.โ
โHoms, like all of the cities recaptured by the government, now belongs mostly to Syriaโs victorious minorities: Christians, Shias and Alawites (an esoteric offshoot of Shia Islam from which Mr. Assad hails). These groups banded together against the rebels, who are nearly all Sunni, and chased them out of the cities.โ (โHow a victorious Bashar al-Assad is changing Syria,โ The Economist, June 28, 2018.)
A Christian teacher in Homs rejoices, for she no longer must live alongside neighbors โwho overnight called you a kafir (infidel).โ
The teacherโs venom is directed at John McCainโs beloved โrebels.โ Internet selfies abound of McCain mixing it up with leading Sunni โrebels,โ against whom Putin and Bashar al-Assad were doing battle. Who knows? McCain may even have taken a pic with the infamous โrebelโ who decapitated Syrian Franciscan monk Father Francois Murad.
Ignoramuses McCain and Graham had both urged the US to send weapons to the โrebelsโโeven as it transpired that the lovelies with whom McCain was cavorting on his sojourns in Syria liked to feast on โฆ the lungs of their pro-Assad enemies. A devotee of multiculturalism, Lindsey could probably explain the idiosyncratic cultural symbolism of such savagery.
Infested as it is by globalist ideologues, the permanent establishment of American foreign policy refuses to consider regional, religious, local, even tribal, dynamics in the Middle East. In particular, that the โgoodโ guys in Syriaโa relative termโare not the Islamist โrebels,โ with whom the senior Republican senator from Arizona was forever frolicking; but the secular Alawites.
You likely didnโt know that Alawites like al-Assad also โflinch at Shia evangelizing. โWe donโt pray, donโt fast [during Ramadan] and drink alcohol,โ says one.โ
Under Putinโs protection, the more civilized Alawite minority (read higher IQ), which has governed Syria since 1966, is in charge again. Duly, reports the anti-Assad Economist, โGovernment departments are functioning. โฆ electricity and water supplies are more reliable than in much of the Middle East. Officials predict that next yearโs natural-gas production will surpass pre-war levels. The railway from Damascus to Aleppo might resume operations this summer. The National Museum in Damascus, which locked up its prized antiquities for protection, is preparing to reopen to the public.โ
Good thinking. The โrebelsโ would have blown Syriaโs prized antiquities to smithereens.
Given that Islamists are not in charge, the specter of men leaving their women and fleeing Syria has had an upside. Syrian women dominate the workforce. Why, theyโre even working as โplumbers, taxi-drivers and bartenders.โ Had Sen. Graham, his friends the โrebels,โ and their Sunni state sponsors wonโTurkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatarโwould this be possible? Turkey is currently sheltering โHayat Tahrir al-Sham, a group linked to al-Qaeda, and other Sunni rebels.โ
Aligned against the Christian-Shia-Alawite alliance are Israel and America, too. Theyโve formed a protective perimeter around rebel holdouts.
Before the breakthrough, when Sunni rebels were gaining ground, Syriaโs โwomen donned headscarves,โ and โnon-Muslim businessmen bowed to demands from Sunni employees for prayer rooms. But as the war swung their way, minorities regained their confidence.โ โChristian women in Aleppo [now] show their cleavage, the internet is unrestricted and social-media apps allow for unfettered communication. Students in cafรฉs openly criticize the regime.โ
Contra the robotic sloganeering from Lindsey, Nikki Haley and the political establishment, Russia has been pushing Bashar al-Assad to open up Syriaโs political process and allow for the revival of โmultiparty politics.โ
Alas, the once bitten Assad is twice shy. His attempts, a decade ago, to liberalize Syrian politics resulted in the ascendancy of Sunni fundamentalism, aka Lindsey Grahamnestyโs rebels. (The nickname is for the Republican senatorโs laissez-faire immigration policies, stateside.)
As has Russia called โfor foreign forces to leave Syria,โ Iranโs included. Iran commands 80,000 Shia militiamen in Syria. โSkirmishes between the [Iranian] militias and Syrian troops have resulted in scores of deaths. Having defeated Sunni Islamists, army officers say they have no wish to succumb to Shia ones.โ
It all boils down to national sovereignty. So as to survive the onslaught of the Sunni fundamentalist majority, the endangered Alawite minority formed an alliance with the Iranian Shia, also a minority among the Ummah. Now, civilized and secular Syrians want their country back. In fact, many Syrian โSunnis prefer Mr. Assadโs secular rule to that of Islamist rebels.โ
***
ilana Mercer has been writing a weekly, paleolibertarian column since 1999. She is the author of โInto the Cannibalโs Pot: Lessons for America From Post-Apartheid South Africaโ (2011) & โThe Trump Revolution: The Donaldโs Creative Destruction Deconstructed“ (June, 2016). Sheโs on Twitter, Facebook, Gab & YouTube
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