---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 12:10:36 -0500
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Christians Suffer for Iraq, Says Archbishop

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2516916,00.html

The Times (UK)
December 23, 2006

Christians suffer for Iraq, says archbishop

By Ruth Gledhill and Michael Evans

An icon from the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem,
where the number of Christians has plummeted to less
than a quarter of the figure in 1948 (Peter Nicholls)

Christians in the Middle East are being put at
unprecedented risk by the Government's 'shortsighted'
and 'ignorant' policy in Iraq, The Archbishop of
Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, says today.

In an extraordinary attack, Dr Williams accuses Tony
Blair and the US of endangering the lives and futures
of many thousands of Christians in the Middle East, who
are regarded by their countrymen as supporters of the
'crusading West.'

He has been backed by bishops across the Church of
England, who say that Christians in the Middle East are
now paying the price for the 'chaos' in Iraq after the
British Government failed to heed their warnings about
the consequences of military action.

Dr Williams, writing in today's Times, says that one
prediction that was systematically ignored was that
Western military action would put the whole of the
Middle East's Christian population at risk.

Writing from Bethlehem, where the number of Christians
has plummeted to a quarter of what they were, he
condemns the Government for failing to put in place a
strategy to help Christians.

'The results are now painfully adding to what was
already a difficult situation for Christian communities
across the region,' he says. 'The first Christian
believers were Middle Easterners. It's a very sobering
thought that we might live to see the last native
Christian believers in the region.' In some Middle
Eastern countries where Muslim-Christian relations have
always been good, he says that extremist attacks on
Christians are becoming 'notably more frequent.'

Dr Williams, who is visiting Israel with Cardinal
Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, Archbishop of Westminster,
Bishop Nathan Hovhannisian, the Armenian Primate of
Britain and David Coffey, the head of the Baptist World
Alliance, returns to Britain today with a call for all
British churches to take action to raise the profile of
Christians in the Middle East. Dr Williams said
yesterday that the Israeli-built wall around Bethlehem
symbolised what was 'deeply wrong in the human heart'.

Despite Dr Williams's attack on British policy in Iraq,
the Government insists that the strategy in southern
Iraq, where about 7,000 troops are based, is bearing
fruit.

Des Browne, the Defence Secretary, told The Times in an
interview this week: 'There is no evidence that the
strategy is not still on course.' He said that
Operation Sinbad, under which troops and reconstruction
teams are devoting resources to improving Basra, was
the key to Britain's strategy.

The Government hopes that next year British troops will
be able to adopt a 'watching role', leaving the trained
Iraqi security forces to take over responsibility for
Basra. 'I think it's highly unlikely that we will need
the same number of troops to watch over the Iraqis as
we have there at present,' Mr Browne said.

He insisted that the environment in Basra was
'genuinely improving'. In October, General Sir Richard
Dannatt, the head of the Army, gave warning in a
newspaper interview that if the British troops stayed
for too long they would risk exacerbating the
situation.

Senior bishops threw their weight behind Dr Williams.Dr
Tom Wright, the Bishop of Durham, said: 'Nobody takes
any notice of what churchmen say about these things.
Now this has turned into a very sorrowful ???I told you
so'.'

Dr Wright, who is one of the Church's top five clerics,
said: 'We have argued all along that what was being
done in our name by our Government, led by America,
would have disastrous consequences.

'The 64-and-a-half thousand dollar question is, what do
we do now? We have made a problematic situation far
worse. Even if there were changes of government in
America and Britain, they will still have to cope with
the chaos that has been unleashed.'

He called for the UN resources in the region to be
strengthened. 'Long term, that is what we must do
because it is ridiculous for any one, two or three
countries to pretend they can be global policemen in
other people's parts of the world. We desperately need
a credible international police force.'

'As long as it is America and Britain doing the
policing, local people will see it as Christian nations
coming in and beating up Muslim nations, so it merely
makes matters worse.' He said that the ensuing chaos
could lead to a situation that was 'worse than Saddam'.

The Bishop of Chelmsford, the Right Rev John Gladwin,
said: 'I am fully aware of the appalling situation in
which many Christians in the Middle East now find
themselves and would wish to give my whole-hearted
support to the Archbishop.'

The Bishop of Liverpool, the Right Rev James Jones,
said: 'The Archbishop has done much to deepen
friendship between Christians, Muslims and Jews in this
country. We must pray that this friendship spreads.

'We face two further possibilities: either a conflict
of attrition between the faiths or a settlement of
peaceful coexistence. We must hope that Christians will
find the same just treatment in the Middle East as
Muslims have a right to expect in this country.'

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