Mike Curtiss (15 Dec
2012)
"The Road to Damascus,
then the Real Killing Will Begin"
The Road to Damascus
Frontpagemag.com ^ | 14DEC12 | Daniel Greenfield
Posted on December 14, 2012 10:53:54 AM CST by bayouranger
Forget the Grand Prix or the Daytona 500, the real race right
now is the race to Damascus. The racers include Syrian rebels in
pickup trucks with mounted machine guns and homemade tanks,
toting weapons and equipment supplied and paid for by Qatar and
Turkey, and more covertly by the British and French intelligence
services. Racing along with them are carloads of international
diplomats urging their governments to give the Islamist militias
more money and more weapons.
Everyone is on the road to Damascus in this amazing race.
Christian refugees from Aleppo, Alawites packing in behind the
tanks of the Syrian army and Iraqi militias that used to plant
IEDs in front of American Humvees, who have found new work
blowing up churches and taking over Syrian bases.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah’s militias out of
Lebanon are shooting at Al Qaeda and Muslim Brotherhood militias
from across the Middle East and even Europe. Imagine the Crips
and the Bloods, armed to the teeth by every country from Mexico
to China, fighting over the ruins of California cities, and you
get some idea of the glorious Syrian civil war being fought by
the Brave Syrian People in a conflict that will determine once
and for all who will be ethnically cleansing who this year.
The Syrian rebels are Sunni. The Syrian regime is Alawite, which
is close enough to Shiite in a region where most Sunnis hate
Shiites. This isn’t some heroic battle between the people and
the dictator; it’s a religious war. And in a newly Islamist
region, religion is the best possible reason that anyone can
think of for a war, that will just incidentally happen to
realign a strategic piece of territory from the Shiite axis to
the Sunni axis.
We, as befits the nation that Obama described as one of the
largest Muslim countries in the world, happen to be in the Sunni
axis, ensconced somewhere between the fattest child-molesting
members of the Saudi and Qatari royals, the most vicious Turkish
and Egyptian Islamists, and the Eurocrats looking to score oil
deals with the former and arms deals with the latter, and
political points with their domestic population of Sunni
Islamists who have the unfortunate habit of blowing things up.
On the road to Damascus, the politicians and pundits tell us
that we cannot simply sit things out. Someone is bound to remove
Assad and we had better be in good with whoever does.
The UK, which dragged Obama into Libya the way an elderly lady
drags a poodle into a pub, is frantically urging us to stop just
looking the other way while Qatar and Turkey arm the Syrian
rebels, and to get into the rebel-arming business ourselves.
Considering how well that worked out in Libya, we should
probably hurry and start arming the Syrian rebels right now. The
sooner we give them weapons, the less likely they are to use
them against us. Or so the reasoning of the people who brought
you Iran, September 11 and September 11 II: The Mohammed Video
Diaries goes. And with a track record like that, how could they
possibly be wrong?
If we give the right Syrian rebels the weapons, then they will
win, instead of the wrong Syrian rebels. But if we don’t, then
the wrong Syrian rebels will win, and even the right Syrian
rebels will hate us and turn wrong, and before you know it
they’ll be shooting at us with the weapons we didn’t give them.
Telling apart the right Syrian rebels from the wrong Syrian
rebels is tricky. The Free Syrian Army, once hailed as a
moderate secular organization, has more Al Qaeda in it than the
dirt in Tora Bora. The head of this moderate secular opposition,
Sheikh Mouaz Al-Khatib, who had previously praised Saddam for
“terrifying the Jews,” objected to the American declaration that
the Al-Qaeda militias are terrorists.
“The logic under which we consider one of the parts that fights
against the Assad regime as a terrorist organization is a logic
one must reconsider,” Al-Khatib said, and it’s hard to argue
with his logic. The difference between the Muslim Brotherhood
and Al Qaeda is that the Muslim Brotherhood wins an election
before shooting people in the streets while Al Qaeda shoots
people in the street without waiting for an election.
To the Democracy Uber Alles crowd, this makes a big difference,
but the people being shot are still dead either way.
No serious thinkers seriously think that not siding with either
side is an option. When confronted with Muslim terrorists, they
begin searching for moderates in the rubbish bin, and with a
working definition of a moderate that includes anyone less
extreme than the most extreme of the extreme, they keep finding
moderate Syrian rebels who will be our friends tomorrow for a
few RPGs today.
Today we have to support the Muslim Brotherhood for fear that Al
Qaeda will take over. Tomorrow we will have to support Al Qaeda
for fear that Al-Takfir Wa Al-Hijra will take over. And then
we’ll have to support the Takfiris for fear that Itbach Al-Kul
Ulum will take over. And the day after our leaders will have no
choice but to nuke the entire planet for fear that an asteroid
will hit it instead. The radiation will be bad, they tell us,
but at least nuclear weapons are moderate. Asteroids are
extreme.
The Muslim Brotherhood is running torture chambers in Egypt and
shooting protesters in the street, but we’re still shipping them
free F16s and helping them take over Syria. Because if we don’t
help them, how will we have any influence over them? If the
Muslim Brotherhood can’t non-violently seize power in Syria
through a violent civil war, there is a risk that they will turn
to violence again. And that means they’ll start trying to
violently take over countries without going through the
formality of fighting a civil war to take them over first.
Every leader of Al Qaeda was a member of the Muslim Brotherhood,
but since the Muslim Brotherhood, like the New Left, is willing
to non-violently take us over through front groups and
immigration, rather than flying planes into buildings, they’re
our idea of the good guys, even if they have the same objectives
as Al Qaeda, just a different way of getting there. But you
could probably say the same thing about the people who were
running the USSR in 1932 and the people who are running the
United States and the European Union in 2012.
Obama isn’t satisfied with wrecking just Libya, Tunisia and
Egypt. Russia isn’t satisfied with financing 50 years of war in
the region even though it’s on the verge of bankruptcy. Prime
Minister Cameron of the UK and President Hollande of France
aren’t satisfied with being on the verge of bankruptcy and only
wrecking Libya. And like Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Dorothy
Lamour, they’re all on the road to Damascus. Or the road to
hell.
And so on they go, all together, rebels and diplomats,
throat-slashers and powdered-hair personalities, embedded into a
conflict, racing to Damascus, eager to raise the flag, report on
the historic moment, negotiate deals and deliver speeches. Obama
probably already has his written and it will probably be the
same exact speech he delivered when Mubarak fell and Gaddafi got
sodomized to death. There will be lots of moving sentiments
about hope and change, peace and freedom, the choice of the
people and the transition to democracy.
And then the real killing will begin.