Exclusive: The West’s “humanitarian
interventionists” howl over bloody conflicts
when an adversary can be blamed but go silent
when an ally is doing the killing, such as Saudi
Arabia in Yemen, reports Jonathan Marshall.
By Jonathan Marshall
February
23, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News
" -Only
a few months ago, interventionists weredemanding
a militant responseby
Washington to whatGeorge
Soros branded“a
humanitarian catastrophe of historic
proportions” — the killing of “hundreds of
people” by Russian and Syrian government bombing
of rebel-held neighborhoods in the city of
Aleppo.
Leon Wieseltier, a senior fellow at the
Brookings Institution and formerNew
Republiceditor,
wasdenouncingthe
Obama administration as “a bystander to the
greatest atrocity of our time,” asserting that
its failure to “act against evil in Aleppo” was
like tolerating “the evil in Auschwitz.”
Feb 2017 The Starvation in Yemen
How
strange, then, that so many of the same
“humanitarian” voices have been so quiet of late
about the continued killing of many more
innocent people in Yemen, wheretens
of thousands of civilians have diedand12
million people face famine.
More than a thousand children die each week from
preventable diseases related to malnutrition andsystematic
attackson
the country’s food infrastructure by aSaudi-led
military coalition,
which aims to impose a regime friendly to Riyadh
over the whole country.
“The U.S. silence has been deafening,”saidPhilippe
Bolopion, deputy director for global advocacy at
Human Rights Watch, last summer. “This blatant
double standard deeply undermines U.S. efforts
to address human rights violations whether in
Syria or elsewhere in the world.”
Official acquiescence — or worse — from
Washington and other major capitals is
encouraging the relentless killing of Yemen’s
civilians by warplanes from Saudi Arabia and its
allies. Last week, theirbombs
struck a funeral gatheringnorth
of Sanaa, Yemen’s capital, killing nine women
and a child and injuring several dozen more
people.
A
day earlier,officials
reported a deadly “double-tap” airstrike,
first targeting women at a funeral in Sanaa,
then aimed at medical responders who rushed in
to save the wounded. A United Nations panel of
experts condemned a similar double-tap attack by
Saudi coalition forces in October, which killed
or wounded hundreds of civilians, as a violation
of international law.
The Tragedy of Mokha
On Feb. 12, an air strike on the
Red Sea port city of Mokha killed all six
members of a family headed by the director of a
maternal and childhood center. Coalition ground
forces had launched an attack on Mokha two weeks
earlier.
Xinhua news agencyreported,
“the battles have since intensified and trapped
thousands of civilian residents in the city, as
well as hampered the humanitarian operation to
import vital food and fuel supplies . . . The
Geneva-based UN human rights office said that it
received extremely worrying reports suggesting
civilians and civilian objects have been
targeted over the past two weeks in the
southwestern port city . . . Reports received by
UN also show that more than 200 houses have been
either partially damaged or completely destroyed
by air strikes in the past two weeks.”
The
U.N.’s humanitarian coordinator furtherreportedthat
“scores of civilians” had been killed or wounded
by the bombing and shelling of Mokha, and that
residents were stranded without water or other
basic life-supporting services.
That could be Aleppo, minus only the
tear-jerking photos of dead and wounded children
on American television. However, unlike Syria,
Yemen’s rebels don’t have well-financed public
relations offices in Western capitals. They pay
no lip service to the United States, democracy,
or international human rights. Their foe Saudi
Arabia is a friend of Washington, not a
long-time adversary. In consequence, few
American pundits summon any moral outrage at the
Saudi-led coalition, despitefindingsby
a United National Panel of Experts that many of
its airstrikes violate international law and, in
some cases, represent “war crimes.”
Aiding and Abetting
The
United States hasn’t simply turned a blind eye
to such crimes; it has aided them by selling
Saudi Arabia the warplanes it flies and the
munitions it drops on Yemeni civilians. It has
also siphoned 54 million pounds of jet fuel from
U.S. tanker planes to refuel coalition aircraft
on bombing runs. The pace of U.S. refueling
operations hasreportedlyincreased
sharply in the last year.
The
Obama administration initially supported the
Saudi coalition in order to buy Riyadh’s
reluctant support for the Iran nuclear deal.
Over time, Saudi Arabia joined with anti-Iran
hawks to portray Yemen’s rebels as pawns of
Tehran to justify continued support for the war.
Most experts — including U.S. intelligence
officials —insist
to the contrarythat
the rebels are a genuinely indigenous force that
enjoys limited Iranian support at best.
As
I havedocumentedpreviously,
all of the fighting in Yemen has damaged U.S.
interests by creating anarchy conducive to the
growth of Al Qaeda extremists. They have planned
orinspired
major acts of terrorismagainst
the West, including an attempt to blow up a U.S.
passenger plane in 2009 and a deadly attack on
the Parisian newspaperCharlie
Hebdoin
January 2015. The Saudis tolerate them as Sunni
allies against the rebels, in the name of
curbing Iran.
Though the Obama administration is gone, the
Trump administration is flush with ideologues
whoare
eager to take a stand against Tehranthrough
Yemen and look tough on “terrorism.” Within days
of taking office, President Trump approved a
commando raid targeting an alleged Al Qaeda
compound in central Yemen that went awry,killing
an estimated 10 women and children.
The administration has also diverted a U.S.
destroyer to patrol Yemen’s coast.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, to his credit,
has cited “the urgent need for the unfettered
delivery of humanitarian assistance throughout
Yemen,”according
to a department spokesman.
But no amount of humanitarian aid will save
Yemen’s tormented people from the bombs made in
America and dropped from U.S.-made warplanes,
with little protest from Washington’s so-called
“humanitarian interventionists.”
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