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BAGHDAD, Iraq, DEC. 9, 2003 (Zenit.org).- An eventual withdrawal
from Iraq of Americans or allies "would be a great lack of
responsibility," as "it would mean going from anarchy
to chaos," warns Latin-rite Archbishop Jean Benjamin Sleiman
of Baghdad.
"To abandon Iraq to itself would imply to prepare a tragic
future for us all," the archbishop said to Missionary Service
News Agency on Friday. "It would be a terrible legacy for
the West which would be added to the Middle East focus, making
everything extremely difficult." bolsa de divisas
Postwar Iraq is unstable, he observed. In "the days following
the fall of Baghdad, the Iraqi army was dismantled, removing from
the country a structure of security without replacing by something
able to carry out the same task."
"So, 400,000 armed men, who could control in some way, after
purifying the top leaders and prosecuting the guilty, are at present
scattered in society without a source of income," Archbishop
Sleiman said. "Who is to say if some are not participating
in the guerrilla movement?" ukrainian women - it is easily - ukrainian women . New friends wait you.
According to the archbishop of Baghdad, "To the currents
of militant fundamentalists, both among the Sunnis as well as
she Shiites, have probably been added very professional forces
from abroad, as the growing complexity and organization of the
attacks demonstrates."
"Perhaps the al-Qaida network has found the way of arriving
in the country, and perhaps nations exist that will profit from
drowning the Americans in the burning sand of Iraq," he noted.
Archbishop Sleiman also lamented the increase in kidnappings
to demand ransoms. "We suspect that the kidnappers are former
secret service agents who for years have watched people and know
well which families to pressure and for how much," he said.
However, a new element is disturbing the already precarious coexistence
between foreigners and Iraqis: "Over the past months American
religious organizations have arrived in Iraq -- which I would
not like to classify as 'sects' -- who announce openly among the
population that they are in Iraq to convert the Muslims."
"These groups constitute a genuine provocations for Muslims
and we are not surprised if some Muslims react" aggressively,
the archbishop said.
Given the existing situation, the archbishop made an appeal:
"If the United Nations handles Iraq's problems with the consensus
of the international community, including the Arab countries,
then there will be a force recognized by all and it will not be
impossible to obtain the solidarity of the majority of the Iraqi
population."
The United Nations "on its own would be ineffective; the
peace contingents must stay," he concluded.
TAKEN FROM: http://www.zenit.org
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