Religious Left Opposes Pressure Against Iranian Nukes (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Mark D. Tooley 05/16/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/05/16/religious-left-opposes-pressure-against-iranian-nukes/
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Bipartisan resolutions proposed in the U.S. Senate and U.S. House of
Representatives, equally backed by Republicans and Democrats, are
urging the “President to reaffirm the unacceptability of an Iran with
nuclear-weapons capability and oppose any policy that would rely on
containment as an option in response to the Iranian nuclear threat.”
So naturally the Religious Left is opposing these mostly symbolic
statements, because largely pacifist prelates do not believe any
situation, no matter how dire, ever merits even the implied
contemplation of force. They also are more concerned about military
force from the U.S. or Israel than they are about nuclear weapons in
the hands of apocalyptic Iranian mullahs.
Complaining that the congressional resolutions would “undermine
diplomatic efforts,” the leftist churchmen warn the statements would
set a “dangerously low threshold for war” by “ruling out
containment,” possibly even, by some interpretations
endorsing “military force against Iran now.”
The ecumenical complaint to members of Congress was organized by the
Presbyterian Church (USA) chief Capitol Hill lobbyist. It was signed
by Quaker and Mennonite officials, a left-wing Catholic order, and
the lobby offices of the United Church of Christ and the United
Methodist Church.
Noting that Iran’s theocracy since at least the late 1980s
has “engaged in a sustained and well-documented pattern of illicit
and deceptive activities to acquire nuclear capability,” the
congressional resolutions cite Iran as the “most active state sponsor
of terrorism,” according to the U.S. State Department. They also
recalled the U.S. Treasury Department’s finding last year that Iran
had a “secret deal” to help al Qaeda. Of course they mentioned Iran’s
genocidal threats against Israel. And they pointed at the Islamic
Republic’s “serious human rights abuses,” according to the United
Nations, including “torture, cruel and degrading treatment in
detention, the targeting of human rights defenders, violence against
women, and ‘the systematic and serious restrictions on freedom of
peaceful assembly’ as well as severe restrictions on the rights
to ‘freedom of thought, conscience, religion or belief.’”
The Congressional resolutions, noting Iran’s continued failure to
comply with international non-proliferation standards, urge continued
diplomatic and economic pressure on Iran until it ends its nuclear
weapons and ballistic missile programs. It also commends
the “universal rights and democratic aspirations of the Iranian
people.”
Leftist prelates in the U.S. of course are not particularly
interested in disarming or democratizing Iran. Instead, they
complain the congressional resolutions are “undercutting” diplomacy,
which “heightens the potential war.” They quote various critics
claiming the resolutions resemble pre-2003 justifications for the
U.S. overthrow of Saddam Hussein Iraq. They insist Iran has not yet
decided for nuclear weapons. And they reiterate: “Direct, sustained
diplomacy remains the single most effective way to prevent a nuclear-
armed Iran and avert war. And they implore: “We urge you to support
diplomacy, not war, with Iran, and to oppose” the congressional
resolutions.The Religious Left statement never mentions human rights
in Iran. And it does not propose alternatives in case diplomacy
continues to fail. Of course, it does not admit that potential
threats of military force may strengthen diplomacy against Iranian
mullahs not typically impressed by anything other than force.
Next month, the Presbyterian Church (USA) General Assembly will
consider a resolution opposing any even implied threats against
Iran’s mullahs. It would place the 2 million member denomination on
record opposing “preemptive military action by any nation against
Iran.” And it calls for “direct, unconditional negotiations between
the United States and Iran with the goal of… implementing a peaceful
resolution.” The proposed resolution, coming from Atlanta area
Presbyterians, declares the church is “not confident, judging from
past experience, that the U.S.A. has given sufficient thought… to the
consequences of such an attack in Iran itself and across the Middle
East.”
The Presbyterian Church (USA) General Assembly Stated Clerk Gradye
Parsons composed his own Iran policy, telling President Obama earlier
this year, according to Presbyterian News Service: “The Christian
tradition we share urges us to seek limits to violence and,
therefore, requires us to oppose any rush to initiate another war in
the Middle East.” Parsons cited the Iraq and Afghanistan wars as
reasons to be wary. And he opined: “Negotiations do work. Look at
the North Korean decision to suspend their nuclear program.” Parsons
also claimed that Just War teaching argues against any force against
Iran. The largely pacifist Religious Left’s understanding of the
Just War tradition is that absolutely no situation would ever meet
its impossibly exacting standards.
None of these churchmen discussed how a nuclear armed Iran might
affect the Middle East and the world. Nor did they even really
express that much distress about Iranian nukes. In typical fashion,
purported over reactions by the U.S. and Israel are the chief
concerns.
The Religious Left does not have a very admirable history regarding
Iran’s theocratic dictatorship. Although often recalling the reputed
U.S. role in restoring the Shah to power in 1953 as one of the
century’s supposed great crimes, religious leftists almost never
comment on the far more murderously tyrannical regime that replaced
the Shah. Even during the 1979-1980 hostage crisis, the U.S.
National Council of Churches chastised the U.S. by praying America
would “resume a more open views towards the needs and concerns of the
Iranian people.”
The United Methodist Council of Bishops, at about the same time,
confessed: “We have committed grave sins against the people of the
Islamic Republic of Iran.” One bishop even visited Ayatollah
Khomeini and afterwards pronounced that the “Islamic system is a
democratic system founded on popular consensus.” An official from the
church’s lobby office, called the Board of Church and Society, which
has backed the recent letter against pressuring Iran, in 1980 even
bailed out from jail and tried to provide bus transportation for pro-
Khomeini Iranian student demonstrators in Washington, D.C. “I know
there are individuals in the Iranian power structure who do trust The
United Methodist church,” one bishop boasted in 1981. No doubt.
Churches are right to hope and pray for a peaceful resolution of the
Iranian nuclear situation. But the Religious Left once again
demonstrates it has no moral authority when it villainizes the U.S.
and Israel, while ignoring the Iranian theocracy’s over 3 decades of
monstrous crimes, not to mention the nightmarish scenario of Iranian
nukes. Members of Congress of both parties who live in the real world
will rightly ignore the Religious Left’s foolish stance. (Copyright ©
2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 05/16/12)
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