Rowan Williams speaks out on Iraq

The BBC is reporting the Archbishop of Canterbury’s critique of humanitarian and security situation in Iraq. His words are in response to his trip to Syria where he had the opportunity to meet with a number of Iraqi refugees and to hear their stories and first-hand reports of life in that country:

“The Iraq conflict has wreaked ‘terrible damage’ on the region – far more than has been acknowledged, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

Dr Rowan Williams said ‘urgent attention’ was needed to stabilise the country.

[…]Dr Williams also said he regards any further ‘deliberate destabilisation’ of the region – such as action against Syria and Iran – as ‘criminal, ignorant…and potentially murderous folly’.

Referring to US political advisers, he added that ‘we do hear talk from some quarters of action against Syria, or against Iran’.

‘I can’t understand what planet such persons are living on when you see the conditions that are already there. The region is still a tinderbox,’ Dr Williams said.

Earlier, the archbishop said ‘events of the last few years have done terrible damage in the whole of this region’.

He said many people ‘do not see the cost in human terms of the war which was unleashed’.

Dr Williams concluded: ‘Security that will enable these people to return to Iraq depends on a settlement for the whole of that country guaranteeing the liberty and dignity of every minority.'”

Read the rest here.

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