Senator McCann is visiting with the Syrian rebels in Syria. The Syrian government appears to be gaining the upper-hand over the rebels. The rebels need support to continue their fight. It must come from Muslims! I personnally think the Hezbollah could have a major role in garnering Muslim support, since it's part of the Arab League and has territorial land to gain; and a Muslim preeminence role to play should the rebels take over. But Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah of the Hezbollah group is fearing that if Assad falls, Syria will be controlled by the US and Israel; and indeed, Israel may invade Lebanon. He is sending troops to help his friend Assad!
That kind of thinking is passe. The US and no other major power should interfere in the affairs of the Middle East (nor, should they be allowed to); and President Obama, to his credit, sees this; but Nasrallah is still wallowing in fear of big-power control of his country. Nasrallah has much to gain if Assad goes; his thinking is clouded with fear. (All Russia wants to do his keep its hand in the Middle Eastern pie.) Plainly, the Hezbollah should be calling for a meeting of the Arab League; and further, for Arab League intervention. The Muslims must stand together in unity.
It may seem to the Saudis that Muslim people control is a threat to its own governmental structure. I think this is a correct supposition, but as long as Mecca belongs to Saudi Arabia, there is little chance of governmental change in that country.
A real problem in any Muslim country is the radical political divisions that exist. I have often thought the Nigerians would dominate African politics should they ever become a unified country, instead of a manifold of factious, warring groups of cut-throats over oil, etc. that exist today. But that divisiveness has lasted for centuries in the Muslim world, giving rise to the many dictators that dominated until the Arab Spring marches of the people.
Once the Muslims become self-confident of their own powers to govern amicably among themselves, permitting dissent but not separateness, they will move ahead. Sure, the social problems are great, but not insurmountable. They must believe that Allah will give them strength and continued eye on the vision.
(P.S. Currently--as in every case of international prominence--there is distortion in accounts of what's happening.)
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
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