| and it's a tactic apparently endorsed by muslim regimes. this tactic would likely benefit their regimes, but it certainly won't benefit our situation in iraq.
the inability of muslims to live together with other muslims is an undeniable historical fact - adding to their historic inability to negotiate and compromise.
since there seems to be a cultural divide growing in the middle east, it's interesting to see how the various regimes take sides. on one hand, you have the sunnis led by saudi arabia, egypt, jordan and syria.. on the other, you have iran and its proxy army and terrorist group, hezbollah.. syria seems to be in quite the position - as it's a sunni country that actively assists a shia terrorist group. it's also united with iran solely, imo, due to the threat posed by the u.s... should we somehow be able to restore normal relations with syria, it could be possible to further isolate iran and pressure them into making concessions over its nuke program. or, these sunni/shia conflicts will grow and produce internal wars in all middle eastern countries with mixed populations. |