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Like all the other responses — public, media and political — this one was shot through with mistakes, zig-zags and incorrect assumptions. If Europe is going to find its way through the current crisis we will first have to find our way through these misperceptions. But, like peeling an onion, it is going to require care and undoubtedly cause tears.

First, we need to address the idea of our alleged “responsibility” for this crisis. Much though many British people are willing to berate the former Labour government for its 2003 intervention in Iraq, our country has notably had extremely limited military involvement in Syria. Qatar and the UAE — two countries which have set up quotas to accept precisely no Syrian refugees — certainly have done. And Iran — whose Hezbollah and other militia have been fighting for Iranian interests in Syria for at least four years now — has now even berated Europe for not doing more. In early September Iran’s President Rouhani had the gall to lecture Hungary’s ambassador to Iran over Hungary’s “shortcomings” in the refugee crisis. Saudi Arabia — which has made no Syrians into Saudi citizens — has been backing its preferred sides inside the country. It has also refused to allow the use of 100,000 air-conditioned tents used only for only five days a year by pilgrims on the Hajj. But the Saudis have offered to build 200 new mosques in Germany. Explaining the failure of Gulf countries to take in Syrian refugees, one Kuwaiti official said: “In the end it is not right for us to accept a people that are different from us. We don’t want people that suffer from internal stress and trauma in our country.”

Throughout most of human history it has been easier for people to refuse rather than accept responsibility for things that they have done. Only in the modern West have we landed in the unnatural position of finding it easier to accept responsibility for things we have not done than to profess the truth of our innocence.

But there are even worse truths underneath all this, not least the fact that even our best policies are unattainable. If this has been clear for some time, it is only making itself felt now. The problem might be summed up in the economic migrant/asylum-seeker debate. For the consensus that a lot of mainstream centre-ground politicians in Europe have come to is that the jury is out or unpersuaded by the cause of economic migrants, but that all asylum-seekers must come in. Pretending that we could invent tomorrow an instrument to perfectly differentiate between the two, even that policy is impossible. Consider one example. European law dictates that people fleeing a country because of persecution for their faith, race or sexual orientation (to give just three examples) will be given asylum if they can find their way to Europe. If the number of gay men and women in Africa and the Middle East is — as there is no reason to think it is not — around the same percentage it is in other societies, then that means just for starters that around 5 per cent of the populations of those countries should (providing they can find their way here) be given asylum in Europe. We do know that this is not possible, don’t we? But we pretend it is — pretence based on the quiet hope that they will not find their way here. But what if they do? What if all those people our policy assumed wouldn’t come here now do? The problem of not facing up to any of these failures of thought is that they stop our politicians being able to think their way through to any political leadership.

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thejustcity
September 24th, 2015
6:09 PM
The other hypothetical question that needs to be posed, one which might be invaluable and instructive, is that in a war in a region between two opposing powers who share the same ideology and beliefs, for what reason should it be incumbent upon external and distant regions to take into their hearth every individual from the losing side in that conflict, when the ideology and beliefs of either are both incompatible with and deleterious to those regions?

amcdonald
September 24th, 2015
2:09 PM
All these pictures of refugees show the now TOTAL FAILURE OF ISLAM and it`s fictional Ummah. A prominent arab journalist (BBC...)thinks a russian and american led troops on the ground alliance is being organised to totally destroy Islamic State. That would make sense (like the alliance that destroyed the nazis in WW2). The heroic Kurdish Army deserves solidarity. Today we read of nearly 500 muslims crushed to death at Mecca. The only good news about Islam is its total historical collapse. Western civilisation and Enlightenment values are winning. It`s the triumph of pagan modernism and it`s science and culture.

Dougie
September 24th, 2015
1:09 PM
This is exactly the type of crisis that the EU was (or ought to have been) designed for. Now we can see the EU, from the Commission downwards, is totally useless there remains no possible reason for remaining a member.

Anonymous
September 24th, 2015
1:09 PM
happy are you douglas with the racist ignorant comments which always follow your articles.

Anon
September 24th, 2015
10:09 AM
What the hell is the Coudenhove-Kalergi plan? Sounds like some conspiracist crap to me.

Albert Zbingswiki
September 24th, 2015
10:09 AM
And still the elephant in the room remains the poisonous cancer of a religion which these people bring with them, which spreads death wherever it settles, and which dooms Europe to an oppressive future, as precious few have the nerve to stand up to it. Because, obviously, that would make them a 'phobe, which is the very, very worst thing one can be.

Peter Lee Goodchildmous
September 24th, 2015
9:09 AM
Visions of the Coudenhove-Kalergi plan coming to life. The elite, anonymous puppet masters are at work who control all our destinies......accidents don't just happen like wars, immigration - they are all caused by sometimes forces we are unaware of. The futility of individual thought and logic is nothing compared to the dark and powerful who pull our strings.

Alexander Tomsky
September 24th, 2015
7:09 AM
Spot on! Immigration in the US is not analogous. Americans are a political nation made up of former immigrants, the europeans are made of old small nations and absorbing newcomers is very difficult. But the real problem are the muslims; americans are lucky to have relatively few and given their political religion are able to absorb peacefully most of them

Mitchell Puttick
September 24th, 2015
6:09 AM
Douglas, Please come to Australia and speak on Q&A (Australia's version of Question time). We need a neo- conservative voice to speak some sense into the left (or at least attempt to).

Brian McInnis
September 24th, 2015
5:09 AM
'Many of us who live in Europe, love Europe as it is.' Nothing ever stays as it is for long, Douglas. You really should know that by now.

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