Instead of rushing to grant asylum to hundreds of thousands of nameless Syrian refugees, the Western world should seek solutions in the Middle East — and urge the vaunted Islamic “ummah” to take in its own refugees
It has become well-accepted in the West that Europe and the United
States ought to welcome hundreds of thousands of Muslim refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, and Iraq
writes
Ben Shapiro (shookhran to
Luís Afonso).
… this sounds wonderful when we consider the humanitarian crisis
unfolding in the Middle East. Boosted by the absence of any Western
leadership, ISIS has driven millions from Iraq and Syria, and
Afghanistan continues to degrade into chaos. But before the West
mainlines Muslim immigrants into its veins, it’s worthwhile to stop and
ask two questions: First, why the media focus on the humanitarian crisis
now? Second, who are these refugees?
Why The Focus Now? Europe’s refugee crisis has
unfolded over the last year, but only now seems to have broken through
into mainstream media coverage. That coverage sprang from a viral photo
of a three-year-old Syrian boy’s corpse washed up on the beaches of
Turkey. According to media coverage, the boy’s mother and brother
drowned as well, while his father lived.
The photo certainly breaks your heart. But where were all the photos
of gassed children from Bashar Assad’s Syria when President Obama drew a
red line, and then promptly violated it? Where are all the photos of
babies beheaded by ISIS? Why did this photo make the front pages?
The answer: the other photos would have driven more Middle East
involvement from the West. The current photo does not. It merely demands
that Europe accept more Muslims from the Middle East into its midst,
without solving any of the underlying problems driving the refugee
crisis in the first place. It pushes the notion that the West somehow
owes membership to people who may very well reject the most basic tenets
of the West.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper rightly pointed out this week
that refugee policy will not solve the crisis in the Middle East.
Canada, he said, must “fight the root cause of the problem and that is
the violent campaign being waged against these people by ISIS.” Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agreed,
explaining, “Because of the onslaught of militant Islam in the Middle
East and in Africa, Europe is facing the waves, a tsunami of people
tragically fleeing from the worst crimes that humanity has seen since
the Holocaust.” But the media have no interest in fighting ISIS or
Bashar Assad, so Harper’s and Netanyahu’s comments take a back seat to
the moral posturing of various nations competing to see who can accept
the most refugees.
Who Are These Refugees? That competition to accept
refugees would be fine if we knew that the refugees plan on assimilating
into Western notions of civilized society, and if we knew that they
were indeed victims of radical Muslim atrocities. Unfortunately, we know
neither. It is deeply suspicious that major Muslim countries that do
not border Syria refuse to take in large numbers of refugees, except for
Algeria and Egypt.
Turkey has taken in nearly two million refugees, according to the
United Nations, and keeps the vast majority in refugee camps — a typical
practice in a region that has kept Arab refugees from the 1948 war of
Israeli independence in Arab-run camps for seven decades. Jordan,
Lebanon and Iraq have taken in hundreds of thousands of refugees as
well, but all border the chaotic, collapsing Syria, and thus have
limited choice in the matter. Iran has taken in no refugees. Neither
have Pakistan, Indonesia, or any of the other dozens of member states of
the Organization of Islamic Cooperation. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain all refused to take any refugees, and explicitly cited the risk of terrorists among the refugees, according to The Guardian (UK).
These fears are not without merit, as even Obama administration
officials have acknowledged: back in February, director of the National
Counterterrorism Center Nicholas Rasmussen called Syrian refugees
“clearly a population of concern.” FBI Assistant Director Michael
Steinbach explained, “Databases don’t [have] the information on those
individuals, and that’s the concern. On Tuesday, State Department
spokesman John Kirby told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer that terrorist infiltration
was “a possibility. I mean, you can’t, you can’t dismiss that out of
hand.” He then added,
“Obviously, if you look at those images though, it’s pretty clear that
the great majority of these people are innocent families.”
Actually, images show a disproportionate number of young males in
crowds of refugees. And those images reflect statistical reality:
according to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, Mediterranean Sea refugees are overwhelmingly
male: just 13 percent are women, and just 15 percent are children. The
other 72 percent are men. Compare that population to the refugees in the
Middle East
from the same conflicts: 49.5 percent male, and 50.5 percent female,
with 38.5 percent under the age of 12. Those are wildly different
populations.
And they act in wildly different ways. According to The Daily Mail (UK), Syrian refugees have turned the Greek island of Lesbos into a “war zone,” and refugees in Hungary taunted police with Islamic chants of “Allahu Akbar.” Hungarian national television channel M1 reported on Tuesday
that “Islamist terrorists, disguised as refugees, have shown up in
Europe… Many who are now illegal immigrants fought alongside Islamic
State before.”
… Humanitarian concerns are deeply important. But so is maintaining the
character of the West, and maintaining the security of its citizens.
Instead of rushing to grant asylum to hundreds of thousands of nameless
Syrian refugees, the Western world should seek solutions in the Middle
East — and urge the vaunted Islamic “ummah” to take in its own refugees.