http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/ideology-vs-reality?f=puball
It’s a source of constant disappointment to me that, in this fortunate country where we have a free flow of information and the right to think for ourselves, so many of us, from individuals to media conglomerates, buy into rigid party lines, knee-jerk ideological responses to complex issues, and wild claims from fear-mongers, left or right. Facts matter. Even when those facts are uncomfortable and challenge our general beliefs. When new facts emerge, we have to be willing to (constantly) re-examine our positions. As Americans, we always want there to be good guys and bad guys, clearly identified, but whether we speak of Syrian rebels or our own Congress, the real challenge is just to identify the less-bad guys.
Consider a couple of examples, foreign and domestic, in which we, the People, have been manipulated, based on our ideological biases-which, inevitably, open up blind spots.
Last week, Iraq’s prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, made headlines when he announced that his government had detected the flow of larger numbers of al Qaeda operatives into Syria to support the anti-Assad opposition. And our media-every single outlet-took al-Maliki’s claim at face value: “Oooooh, al Qaeda’s coming! Bad rebels, bad!”
No one stopped to ask why al-Maliki might have made that announcement-when he certainly hasn’t had the West’s best interests at heart since the U.S. abandoned Iraq to Iranian influence. Well, here’s what lay behind it: al-Maliki works closely with the Iranians. The Iranians desperately want to save the murderous (and anti-Western) Assad regime in Syria. And Iran knows that all you have to do is to whisper “al Qaeda!” and we panic. But, of course, we wouldn’t believe anything Tehran said about Syria. So the Iranians got their Iraqi client to be their mouthpiece. And we bought it-without asking for one shred of evidence. Iran 1, USA 0. Again.
This isn’t to say that the Syrian opposition are all angels-the freedom fighters run the gamut (and have some very different definitions of “freedom”). But let’s try logic again: If your family is being massacred and the West just stands by watching and tut-tutting, and Islamists appear to help you defend your home and save your family’s lives, to whom will your sympathies gravitate? At present, al Qaeda is absolutely not a significant player in Syria. But endless dithering can make it one over time. While direct American military intervention isn’t the answer, either, we should be strongly encouraging our regional clients and (relative) allies to act at various levels. Oh, and covert support from the CIA and special ops for the more-attractive elements in the opposition certainly would help-as well as giving us an on-the-ground feel for who’s who.