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   | Target Iran: Christian Fundamentalists' Road To The End Of The World By Yoginder Sikand 11 June, 2008Countercurrents.org
 It is not only because of insatiable greed for oil, or because of America's addiction to war or because of Bush's obvious mental instability that America and its allies now seem hell-bent on attacking Iran, although these factors are certainly important. Equallycrucially, the current wave of fervent war-mongering in the West directed against Iran owes to the enormous clout wielded by Western Christian fundamentalist
 organizations who, following the invasion and destruction of Iraq, which they had so fervently abetted, are now calling for a repeat performance, this time in Iran. These blood-thirsty votaries of the cult of unmitigated violence consider Iran to be the major challenge to American and Zionist imperialism, which they regard as enjoying divine blessing.
 Insisting that America and Israel should invade Iran at once, they regard this as a Christian necessity. They also believe that this would herald a global war
 of cosmic proportions that would, so they believe, usher in the end of the world and Jesus' Second Coming, something that they passionately await.
   A key American Christian fundamentalist ideologue is the Texas-based televangelist John Hagee. He is no insignificant crank, although his views are, to put it mildly, wildly outlandish. He is said to be close toto leaders of the American Republic Party as well asIsraeli intelligence officers and politicians. He is the pastor of The Cornerstone Church based in SanAntonio, and also heads the multi-million dollar Global Evangelism media company that broadcasts his daily programmes on 172 television and 82 radio
 stations throughout the USA and around the world. His fervent appeals to Christian simplicity obviously are not intended to apply to himself: he is said to be one
 of the wealthiest men in his city, and the trust that he has named after himself, The John Hagee Rabbi Trust, includes among its various assets a ranch spread over almost 8000 acres.
 Hagee is one of the principal ideologues of what is called Christian Zionism, which is said to be the fastest growing religious cult in America today. Hagee is known for his fervent support for Israel, for he considers this a Biblical duty binding on Christians,and has been opposed to any peace deal that might cause Israel to give up back any occupied land to the Palestinians. He works closely with several American
 and Israeli Jewish groups, and is one of the architects of a Christian evangelical-Zionist
 alliance. Recently he was in the news for bringing together 400 Christian evangelical leaders, representing as many as 30 million Christians, for a' Summit on Israel', which resulted in the formation of a new pro-Israeli lobbying group called Christians
 United for Israel, which intends to establish a50-state rapid-response network that aims to reach every senator and congressman in America.
 Author of numerous Christian fundamentalist texts,Hagee's latest book, 'Jerusalem Countdown: A Preclude
 to War' encapsulates the Christian fundamentalists'
 case for a joint American-Israeli invasion of Iran. In
 order to build up his argument, he portrays Iran in
 the most lurid colours. 'Iran', he insists, without
 adducing any evidence (for in Christian fundamentalist
 circles-and in the West more generally-such evidence
 is not needed) 'is the command post for global terror'
 (p.vii). Under President Ahmadinijad, Hagee argues,
 Iran is building up a nuclear stockpile, which it
 intends to share with the rest of the Islamic world.
 Since Iran, so he claims, is motivated by hatred for
 Israel and America 'without limitation', it might use
 these weapons to attack both these countries and their
 allies and to completely destroy Western civilisation
 (pp.4-5). Hence, before this can happen, America and
 Israel, he insists, must invade Iran and destroy the
 nuclear bombs that it supposedly possesses.
 As Hagee and his ilk see it, Iran's opposition toAmerica and Israel has nothing whatsoever to do with
 American aggression and imperialism or to Zionist
 occupation and Israeli crimes against humanity.
 Rather, this opposition is attributed squarely to the
 fact that most Iranians are Muslims. It is, Hagee
 claims, Islam as a religion that is the cause of the
 supposed hatred of Muslims (including Iranians)
 towards America and Israel. Here, he conveniently
 ignores the fact that most ruling regimes in Muslim
 countries, some of which, such as Saudi Arabia, spare
 no effort to display their supposedly 'Islamic
 credentials', are decidedly pro-American and are
 little more than appendages of the West. Obviously,
 conceding this inconvenient fact would seriously
 undermine his argument.
 Tracing the cause of anti-Westernism simply to Islam,Hagee claims that Jews and Christians, on the one
 hand, and Muslims, on the other, are presently engaged
 in nothing less than the final battle for global
 domination, and that, in fact, World War III has
 already begun. Since this is, as he characterises it,
 a religious war, a war, as George Bush describes it,
 between 'good' and 'evil', there can be no compromise
 or settlement between the supposedly contending
 parties. It is a war to the finish, even if it brings
 about the destruction of the world and the entire
 human race through nuclear conflagration. In fact,
 Hagee seems to clearly suggest (and this is something
 that he appears to share with numerous other
 influential Christian fundamentalist ideologues) that
 this grand, final war must be speeded up by all
 possible means, for only then, he believes, will Jesus
 return to the world, destroy all non-Christians and
 dispatch all 'good' Christians, like Hagee himself, to
 ever-lasting bliss in heaven.
 In order to justify what is nothing short than aglobal anti-Islamic crusade, in which a proposed
 invasion of Iran is just one step, Hagee repeats many
 of the worn-out, tired clichés about Islam that were,
 and still are, part of the stock vocabulary of
 Christian fundamentalism. Islam and Christianity are
 poles apart, he insists. He claims that Muslims and
 Christians do not even worship the same God, and that
 Allah is actually 'the moon god of Mecca' (p.2). While
 Christianity is said to teach peace and love, Islam,
 he contends, does precisely the opposite. He claims
 that Islam was spread by the sword by the Prophet
 Muhammad and his followers, while, ignoring the
 centuries of Christian aggression, he writes that
 Christianity was spread through love and charity.
 Islam, he claims, insists that Muslims must kill all
 non-Muslims if they do not accept to accept Islam.
 Muslims, are by definition, 'terrorists', he says,
 because their religion allegedly teaches them that
 this is precisely what they should be. Muslims, he
 goes on, are driven to hate non-Muslims because their
 religion allegedly tells them to do so. Islam, he
 writes, has an 'absolute commitment' to 'violence, to
 murder and to terror'. (p.70). Muslims' supposed
 hatred of the West, he claims, is because the West
 (supposedly) champions democracy, freedom, women's
 rights, men's respect for women, education, the love
 of life, equality and so on, all of which, so Hagee
 wants his readers to believe, Islam strongly
 proscribes (p.28).
 The ultimate aim of Muslims, Hagee claims, is to
 destroy the West, kill all Jews and Christians,
 because, he writes, this is 'their ticket to heaven
 and the seventy-two virgins that await them there'
 (p.23). Muslims, he argues, aim to conquering the
 whole world and establishing a one-world Islamic
 government (pp.6-16). He terrorizes his readers into
 believing that a massive Muslim 'religious army,
 unlike anything the Western world has seen since the
 sawn of civilization' is now preparing for war against
 the West, intending to conquer it and force Christians
 and Jews into slavery if they do not accept Islam.
 (p.6)
 Iranian/Muslim opposition to America and Israel thusbeing said to be entirely a result of alleged Islamic
 teachings, rather than having any political or
 economic causes, the solution that Hagee offers is
 also expressed in religious terms: unleashing what is
 virtually a second crusade against Muslims the world
 over. The first step that America must do in this
 regard, he argues, is to admit and announce that it is
 engaged in a religious war against Islam, which he
 says, 'is totally dedicated' to America's destruction
 (p.35). Accordingly, he advises that the American
 government must firmly tighten control on Muslim
 immigration to that country. He even goes so far as to
 suggest that all American Muslims are real or
 potential 'terrorists' or terrorist-sympathisers, and
 claims that 'sleeping terrorist cells' have been set
 up in mosques and Islamic centres across the country.
 (p.63). 'The Islamic army is not coming .it's here.
 Quietly living next door, they are waiting for the
 phone to ring for orders to attack', he says with
 regard to Muslims living in America. (p.35)
 This veiled argument for justifying government-backedwitch-hunts directed against Muslims in America is
 accompanied by equally frightening steps that Hagee
 advocates against Muslims living elsewhere. America
 must continue, and even step up, its war in Iraq, he
 insists, and must not bow to any pressure to withdraw
 from that country for that , he says, would be
 'perceived as a victory for radical Islam' which might
 embolden Muslims to bring the war into America itself.
 (p.35). Simultaneously, he argues, with unconcealed
 glee, America must attack Iran and destroy its
 supposed nuclear warheads.
 This attack on Iran, Hagee writes, would be asingularly crucial event of cosmic proportions. It
 would, he claims, be nothing less than a major 'part
 of a much bigger picture-that of God's plan for the
 future of Israel and the entire world'. It would, in
 fact, he says, unleash a chain of bloody and
 devastating wars, the like of which humankind world
 has never witnessed before, and which would soon cause
 the destruction of the entire world. (p.37) The reader
 is not left without a strong feeling that this is
 precisely what Hagee and his war-mongering fellow
 Christian fundamentalists actually desperately crave
 for.
 Hagee sketches out the chain of events that wouldfollow from the American attack on Iran which he
 claims the Bible predicts in fine detail. No sooner
 does America invade Iran than a massive Muslim army,
 hundreds of thousands strong, will attack Israel with
 Russian assistance in order to destroy it. This army
 would unleash nuclear weapons against America and
 Israel, and, in this way, would cause what he calls 'a
 nuclear Armageddon'. (p.53). This, Hagee insists, is
 not something that can at all be prevented. In fact,
 he seems to suggest that this global war is something
 to be wildly celebrated by Christians because, he
 claims, it has been ordained by none other than God
 Himself. 'God is making it clear that He is dragging
 Russia and its allies into Israel', Hagee writes
 (p.145). The purpose: So that God can 'crush them [the
 Russian-Muslim alliance] so that the Jews of Israel as
 a whole will confess that He is the Lord!". By all
 counts, nasty, brutal way for the god of Hagee's
 imagination to seek to convince the Jews of his
 existence.
 The combined Russian-Muslim force that attacks Israelas soon as America and Israel attack Iran will cause
 widespread death, Hagee says, but then God will
 intervene and cause his 'fury [to] explode' against
 those who have gathered against the Jews, for God,
 Hagee claims, considers the Jews 'His chosen people'.
 But no sooner has the Russo-Muslim army been quashed
 than another major opponent appears: this time in the
 form of the Anti-Christ, the Son of Satan, who will,
 through his powers of black magic, conquer the entire
 world. He will enter into a seven-year peace treaty
 with the Jews ostensibly in order to protect them from
 the Muslims and the Russians, but after three and a
 half years have passed he will break the treaty and
 will turn on the Jews, seeking to obliterate them. In
 this task, Hagee writes, he will be assisted by what
 the Bible calls the 'Man from the East', which he
 identifies as China.
 This represents the culmination of the final battlethat heralds the end of the world, so Hagee (like
 other Biblical literalists and Christian extremists)
 believes. In this war against the Anti-Christ and
 China, the West will join forces with the Jews, at a
 place call Armageddon, a narrow valley outside
 Jerusalem, which the Bible describes in considerable
 gory detail.
 Just before the battle is about to begin, a miraclewill appear, so Hagee ardently believes. Quoting the
 Book of Revelations, the last chapter of the Christian
 Bible, he writes, Jesus will descend to earth from the
 skies, clothed in a garment dipped in blood and seated
 on a white horse. He will be followed by a heavenly
 cavalry to assist him. His task, Hagee quotes the Book
 of Revelations as saying, will be to judge and make
 war. With the sharp sword that he wields in his mouth,
 Jesus shall 'strike the nations' that have gathered
 against Israel, killing the Anti-Christ and the 'Man
 from the East' and sending them-literally hundreds of
 millions of people-all non-Christians, that is-to
 eternal torment in hell. The blood of those slain by
 Jesus, Hagee approvingly refers to the Book of
 Revelations as announcing, would create a virtual 'sea
 of human blood' that will be 'two hundred miles long'.
 Jesus would then ascend his throne in Jerusalem, fromwhere he would rule the entire (and, if Hagee is to be
 believed, the by-then entirely Christian) world for a
 thousand years. A 'Golden Age of Peace' is how Hagee
 characterizes this era, although how non-Christians
 could ever consider it so is something that he
 obviously does not bother about. 'Rejoice and be
 glad', he excitedly announces, celebrating the gory
 chain of events that he describes with such passion
 that he says will unfold in the wake of an American
 invasion of Iran, 'The best is yet to be!'.
 That 'best' that Hagee and his fellow Christianextremists so fervently pine for, is nothing less than
 the destruction of the entire world.
   http://www.countercurrents.org/sikand110608.htm  |