MS NOW Shows It Is on Shaky Ground; Lawrence O'Donnell Has Some Odd...
Jeff Bezos' Ex Wife Just Proved Wealth Confiscation Doesn't Work
A Forensic Expert in Colorado Just Pleaded Guilty to Mishandling Data in Dozens...
The Best Planes Ever
After Dobbs, Will We Get Life Right on America’s 250th?
The Meaning of America
Trump's Latest D.C. Restoration Is Going To Be Huge
House Set to Pass SAVE America Act for Fourth Time, Johnson Says
John Kasich Is Back and Worse Than Ever
RFK Jr., Dr. Oz: Over 1 Million Enrolled in Obamacare With No Social...
The WNBA's Coordinated Campaign Against Caitlin Clark Is Obvious
Wait, This LA Reporter Was Forced to Apologize After Rooting for Team USA?
U.S. and Iran Exchange New Set of Strikes Just Two Weeks After Peace...
Passing Faith onto the Next Generation
Endowed by Our Creator: How Science Points to the Truths of the Declaration...
Tipsheet

White House: President Trump is Committed to Combating Christian Genocide By ISIS

White House: President Trump is Committed to Combating Christian Genocide By ISIS

According to White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, the Trump administration is committed to issuing additional protections for Christians under threat of genocide from ISIS in the Middle East and North Africa by granting refugee asylum in the United States. 

Advertisement

"It's important to the president, it was during and throughout the campaign. It's something he addressed this morning and it's something he's committed to in terms of allowing Christian minorities in key countries to seek asylum in the United States," Spicer said Thursday afternoon. "He recognizes that in so many nations, these are the oppressed groups in accordance with how the U.N. defines refugees."

Thursday morning at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington D.C., President Trump lamented current bloodshed and savagery being carried out by ISIS against vulnerable groups. 

"We have seen peace-loving Muslims brutalize, victimize, murdered and oppressed by ISIS killers. We have seen threats of extermination against the Jewish people. We have seen a campaign of ISIS and genocide against Christians, where they cut off heads. Not since the Middle Ages have we seen that. We haven't seen that, the cutting off of heads. Now they cut off the heads, they drown people in steel cages," Trump said. "All nations have a moral obligation to speak out against such violence. All nations have a duty to work together to confront it and to confront it viciously if we have to."

Last year, Secretary of State John Kerry officially declared that ISIS is carrying out a genocide against Christians and other minority religious groups. The declaration triggered legal obligations for the United States and United Nations in order to comply with the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

Advertisement

"Naming these crimes is important," Kerry said at the time. "But what is essential is to stop them." 

Based on inquiries from the American Center for Law and Justice, legal obligations in response to genocide haven't been fulfilled by the State Department on behalf of the U.S. or by the UN. 

After a delayed confirmation from Democrats, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was sworn into office Wednesday night. Spicer said he expects to see more guidance on this issue from Tillerson in the future. 

According to the Center of Studies of New Religions, Christians were the most persecuted religious group in the world in 2016. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement