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Is Andrew Brunson's Release More Important Than Alliance With Turkey?
Christian Post ^ | 08/21/2018 | Mark Tooley

Posted on 08/21/2018 10:00:32 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

American evangelicals and human rights advocates are encouraging the United States to pressure Turkey to release American missionary Andrew Brunson, who faces ridiculous allegations of complicity in Kurdish terrorism.

Are they right to do so, even if the price is estrangement with a key NATO member and harm to US regional interests? How should Christians in their political witness balance Christian causes versus the wider national good?

The president, vice president and secretary of state have all denounced Turkey's imprisonment of Brunson. Economic sanctions have been levied against Turkish products, and personal sanctions have targeted two Turkish officials. Congress has acted to prevent the sale of F-35 fighter jets to Turkey.

Evangelical support for Republicans reputedly explains US actions on Brunson, who belongs to a small evangelical denomination. But congressional votes were strongly bipartisan, with Senator Jeanne Shaheen, Democrat from New Hampshire who met with Brunson in Turkey, playing a leading role.

Brunson as a pastor and missionary justifiably generates evangelical advocacy. But he is of course a US citizen. Turkey has detained other US persons under dubious circumstances since the 2016 failed military coup. Erdogan's despotism has accelerated as he's exploited the coup to arrest tens of thousands. For Americans, Christian or otherwise, Brunson is an especially sympathetic arrestee as a non-political clergy and family man with a very small congregation and over two decades of devoted ministry in Turkey.

The multifaceted allegations against Brunson of complicity with terrorism, coup plotting, and collaboration with Erdogan's favorite bête noir are sweepingly absurd. From his Pennsylvania exile, Sufi mystic Fethullah Gülen is the Turkish strongman's nearly universal explanation for all opposition. Erdogan's suggestion that Brunson could be exchanged for Gülen recalls another sinister proposal.

Backed by their new Islamist regime, Iranian hostage takers who occupied the US embassy in 1979 offered their captive American diplomats in exchange for the exiled shah. American law, honor, and decency forbade such a bargain, as they similarly would today.

Iran's regime of mullahs was and remains unequivocally an enemy. Turkey, even under Erdogan, is ostensibly a NATO ally. The Brunson dispute may contribute to the unraveling of Turkey's 70-year alliance with America. Given its strategic importance, is the loss worth it? And should Brunson's advocates, Christian or otherwise, adamantly push ahead despite this risk?

There may not be any choice. America is America, and ignoring or minimizing the outage of such hostage taking, whose Christian victim has already offered public forgiveness in court to his tormentors, contravenes our core national identity.

Yet American denunciations and sanctions, however justified, may only provoke Erdogan into doubling down. As with most despots, exploiting anti-US sentiment is central to his demagoguery. And Turkey's very small Christian community, particularly its tiny subset of Protestants and evangelicals, could suffer by association.

Even if Turkey releases Brunson, as surely it will do eventually, US-Turkey relations may not fully recover. Erdogan has threatened to shift to "new alliances" (i.e., with China or Russia), although Russia is Turkey's historical nemesis. Imagining himself an heir to the sultans, Erdogan has subverted Turkish democracy and panders to his nation's worst instincts. He will continue so long as Turkey allows him.

American-wide resolve against Erdogan's hostage ploy is unsurprising. Nor is evangelical advocacy for Brunson. Nor is silence from the usual quarters typically indifferent both to American honor and global persecution of Christians. (A word search for "Brunson" finds no mention at Christian, social justice focused Sojournerseven after two years, and there is nothing in liberal Protestant Christian Century in a year. But there are many ongoing mentions in evangelical Christianity Today and World.)

With sophistication and discernment, Christian political witness should not automatically conflate Christian interests with American interests. The two overlap in the Brunson case as American character, which is intrinsic to America's lofty understanding of national purpose, precludes indifference.

But such high-minded notions of national character, pursued in place of more traditional interests, often have a cost. Bearing that cost is part of the price and privilege of being American.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Egypt; Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events; Russia; Syria; US: New York; US: North Carolina; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: andrewbrunson; andrewcraigbrunson; armenia; cyprus; djibouti; egypt; erdogan; eritrea; europeanunion; gaza; greece; hamas; hassannasrallah; hezbollah; iran; isis; israel; jerusalem; jordan; kurdistan; lebanon; letshavejerusalem; mediawingofthednc; nato; newyork; newyorkcity; newyorkslimes; newyorktimes; nonplayercharacter; nonplayercharacters; northcarolina; npc; npcs; partisanmediashills; presstitutes; receptayyiperdogan; russia; sinai; smearmachine; sudan; syria; turkey; waronterror; yazidi; yemen; yezidi
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To: SeekAndFind
Wrong question.

Is it possible or to have an alliance with a Turkish Islamic state? Alliance has a specific meaning.

41 posted on 08/21/2018 1:27:19 PM PDT by Salvavida
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To: SeekAndFind

Well, modern Turkey did not, but Greeks that suffered under the Empire prior to the 20th century I am sure felt persecuted.

But aligning ourselves with an Islamist like Erdogan. I don’t think we should be allied with any Muslim countries.


42 posted on 08/21/2018 2:09:28 PM PDT by Sam Gamgee
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To: SeekAndFind

‘Erdogan left Christians alone’ - I don’t think so. My Turkish Christian friend, living here in California, was talking about Christian persecution there at least 10 years ago. Erdogan has always been a Bad Actor. Her brother was the journalist/ head of the paper in Istanbul, who was assassinated at least that long ago. She knew all the latest there. (RIP).


43 posted on 08/22/2018 8:58:52 AM PDT by bboop (does not suffer fools gladly)
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To: SeekAndFind
Turkey did not persecute Christians until Erdogan came along. And Erdogan left Christians alone until very recently.

Tell that to the Armenian Christians butchered by the Ottoman empire, i.e., by the Turks.

In 2005, the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) affirmed that scholarly evidence revealed the "Young Turk government of the Ottoman Empire began a systematic genocide of its Armenian citizens – an unarmed Christian minority population. More than a million Armenians were exterminated through direct killing, starvation, torture, and forced death marches". The IAGS also condemned Turkish attempts to deny the factual and moral reality of the Armenian Genocide. In 2007, the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity produced a letter signed by 53 Nobel Laureates re-affirming the Genocide Scholars' conclusion that the 1915 killings of Armenians constituted genocide. -- Wiki

44 posted on 08/22/2018 10:07:11 AM PDT by JesusIsLord
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To: JesusIsLord

I should have qualified that I was referring to the Modern Turkey after Mustafa Kemal, AKA, Ataturk became the leader.


45 posted on 08/22/2018 10:53:20 AM PDT by SeekAndFind (look at Michigan, it will)
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