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Refugees

26 Nov 2007 02:36 pm

The general lack of attention US policy has given to the huge numbers of refugees from the conflict in Iraq has attracted some notice. This New York Times article on pressure to fudge the numbers on the number of Iraqis returning home hints at perhaps one reason why the humanitarian hawks don't actually care about refugee well-being:

A United Nations survey released last week, of 110 Iraqi families leaving Syria, also seemed to dispute the contentions of officials in Iraq that people are returning primarily because they feel safer.

The survey found that 46 percent were leaving because they could not afford to stay; 25 percent said they fell victim to a stricter Syrian visa policy; and only 14 percent said they were returning because they had heard about improved security.

Failing to provide for refugees, in short, drives returns to Iraq which helps bolster bogus arguments about improving conditions and thus bolster support for the war. It's win-win, unless you're an Iraqi refugee or an American citizen. Meanwhile, the returnees are re-enforcing the patterns of ethnic cleansing that seem to have been the primary drivers behind the decline in violence:

Underscoring a widely held sense of hesitation, many of those who come back to Iraq do not return to their homes. Clambering off the bus on Sunday, a woman who gave her name as Um Dima, mother of Dima, said that friends were still warning her not to go back to her house in Dora, a violent neighborhood in south Baghdad. So for now, she said, she will move in with her parents in southern Iraq.

That seems like a smart move for Um Dima. Am I the only one who remembers, though, that back in the summer/fall of 2006 this sort of thing — massive refugee flows and ethnic cleansing — was allegedly the reason we couldn't leave Iraq? Withdrawal was supposed to have precisely the consequences that staying turned out to have, only staying has also impaired all kinds of other important American strategic objectives around the world.

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Comments (4)

The article is worthless. It doesn't even attempt to place a figure on the number of Iraqi emigrants total (2,000,000 often cited, 1,000,000 in Syria), or give the number of Iraqis who are leaving. Worse, in a story about the politicization of emmigration statistics, the article refers only to the numbers of the internally displaced. The fact that Syria is a desperately poor country, isn't mentioned. Worthless, really.

The fact that we stayed means we have not been DEFEATED. This trumps all. Of course, defeatist liberals like you could hardly be expected to realize this.

The American people want VICTORY in Iraq! And nothing less!

A stopped clock is always right if time has also stopped

You must not have gotten the memo. Just as there is no set of economic conditions to which a tax cut is not the proper response, so there is no set of conditions in Iraq to which continued US troop presence is not the appropriate response.

And of course the arab world has a tradition of dealing with refugees- just take a look at the palestineans who were never allowed to join the societies in the host countries. Im sure local policies make it clear to Iraqis that they should feel free to stay just as long as you have money. Your just not getting a job or earning money you need to live on and you better be planning on leaving.


Comments closed December 10, 2007.

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