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Alright, I did miss that point. Legolas Send a noteboard - 29/05/2017 07:33:36 PM

View original postIt's not about perspective. It's about the fact that this mythical commonality that does not in fact exist is a mask for the complete and utter lack of national identity. We say "Arab World" when a rural Moroccan Berber Sunni has almost nothing in common with a Damascene Alawi. Yet the myth is there, and the myth itself is probably inhibiting any sense of common purpose or shared destiny. It would be as if Spaniards, French and Italians called themselves "Roman" and failed to create unified states as a result (and actually, that pretty much happened in Italy for the longest time, with the predictable consequences).

Except that many of them did create separate states - places like Morocco, Algeria, Oman, etc. have been more or less autonomous or officially independent for many centuries and up to a thousand years. It's one thing if you're talking about Iraq and Syria, or even Saudi Arabia and Jordan, states in which several separate regional identities were combined into one (and I think both friends and enemies would agree that the Palestinian nation is also a rather recent phenomenon, mostly shaped in the first half of the 20th century). But others have a much older national identity, they just have the wider Arab identity in addition to that. Sort of like the relations between the various Spanish-speaking Latin-American countries. Not that that stops them from having minorities which may be in opposition to this national identity.
View original postThe sooner the entire region starts to recognize the realities, the sooner they will form states based on common interest. Aside from the fact that ISIS is a horrendous group, the geographical area that it controlled fell to it quickly for a reason - the Sunni regions of Iraq and Syria had more in common with one another than they did with their "countrymen". The Upper Mesopotamian geographical area has been distinct since they time of the Assyrians and makes a much more logical grouping than Iraq and Syria do. Lower Mesopotamia would be a Shiite state, the mountains of Kurdistan would be a state, and the Levantine coast would be a state.

I can agree with some of that, and certainly the borders of Syria and Iraq and Jordan are pretty arbitrary. I just think you're too black and white about it. Sunnis and Shias have a long history of violent clashes, but so did Catholics and Protestants, once, and in both cases it's often ambiguous whether the religious differences were the actual reason for a war or just a pretext. It doesn't mean that a nation with significant numbers of both is necessarily doomed to failure, it's just a question of political leadership choosing to reconcile, or to divide and conquer. The Kurds could have had their state already at Sevres, and looking at the situation today, it makes sense to give them one, but some of the four nations sharing 'Kurdistan' are or at one point were making decent steps towards a solution involving mere cultural autonomy within the existing borders. To take the most obvious example, Erdogan's Turkey, it's not some kind of historical inevitability that he went back on the warpath and ruined the chances of a lasting peaceful solution for Turkish Kurdistan (in the short term, at least). It's the result of political choices that he and others made, and for which they should be held accountable. Same thing with Assad's and Saddam's divide and conquer tactics in which they played off Sunnites against Shi'ites and Arabs against Kurds in order to maintain their power.
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Hiding? - 23/05/2017 08:58:11 PM 448 Views
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I thought it was obvious that I didn't mean consistently shit. - 23/05/2017 11:36:58 PM 435 Views
It's always about us, then, isn't it? - 24/05/2017 02:34:52 AM 402 Views
For me, it is. - 24/05/2017 07:49:03 AM 403 Views
Don't forget getting an education if you are female *NM* - 23/05/2017 09:38:26 PM 231 Views
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There aren't many left who would bother. *NM* - 23/05/2017 10:52:14 PM 222 Views
Me and the jihadis - victory by sticking around! *NM* - 24/05/2017 11:11:35 AM 222 Views
Picking a concert that would be mostly teenage girls makes it extra disgusting *NM* - 23/05/2017 09:37:25 PM 221 Views
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He said 'extra disgusting'. Not 'less logical'. *NM* - 23/05/2017 10:29:21 PM 240 Views
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I can see that - 24/05/2017 11:47:59 AM 407 Views
It makes me wonder about the attacker - 23/05/2017 11:00:40 PM 401 Views
I wonder about what these people sea in a good who wants this kind of thing - 24/05/2017 05:58:25 PM 384 Views
It really does. That shit makes the blood boil. *NM* - 24/05/2017 05:23:33 PM 242 Views
Isis Shmisis. Daesh is just the end result of the radicalization of many Muslims. - 23/05/2017 11:58:42 PM 376 Views
Blaming the Ottomans, while largely correct, is less satisfying to them. - 24/05/2017 03:21:14 AM 413 Views
There's lots of nationalist feeling, surely. - 24/05/2017 06:48:59 PM 395 Views
Your errors are legion here. - 24/05/2017 10:03:53 PM 384 Views
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You're not looking very hard, then - 27/05/2017 03:23:36 PM 470 Views
At this point we're just arguing about perspective, seems to me. - 28/05/2017 07:11:55 PM 529 Views
No, I think that you're missing the point - 28/05/2017 09:49:34 PM 304 Views
Alright, I did miss that point. - 29/05/2017 07:33:36 PM 362 Views
You can't do anything - 24/05/2017 05:00:31 PM 359 Views
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Oh I do - 25/05/2017 10:27:08 AM 454 Views
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I would prefer to annihilate them, if possible, without boots on the ground. - 24/05/2017 06:03:49 PM 360 Views
I admit my reaction is as much emotional as rational but boots may be needed - 24/05/2017 06:37:51 PM 458 Views
Are you serious? - 28/05/2017 09:56:07 PM 316 Views
There is no tool for not allowing citizens back in the country - 29/05/2017 10:11:42 PM 336 Views
Re: There is no tool for not allowing citizens back in the country *NM* - 29/05/2017 10:11:52 PM 224 Views
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Speak for yourself. - 30/05/2017 06:57:16 PM 396 Views
You have thus argued for the death of education. - 31/05/2017 02:51:11 PM 393 Views
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I'm such a n00b *NM* - 24/05/2017 06:03:50 PM 215 Views

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