March 15, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- While President Trump sat down for a
sumptuous meal at the White House on
Tuesday, March 14 with Saudi Deputy
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman,
millions of Yemenis are going hungry
thanks to Trump’s lunch guest.
Prince
Salman is only 31 years old, but as the
king’s favorite son, he was put in
charge of the nation’s two most critical
sectors: the economy and the military. A
brash defense minister, the young prince
made the disastrous decision to
interfere in an internal conflict in
neighboring Yemen. Starting in March
2015, Prince Salman started a bombing
campaign against the Yemeni Houthis, a
group the Saudi rulers consider aligned
with Iran. The bombing has gone on,
relentlessly, for the past two years. UN
High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid
Ra’ad al Hussein said that
possible war crimes had been documented
with “alarming frequency” since the
Saudis became engaged.
In
addition to thousands of Yemeni
civilians being killed directly by Saudi
bombs, the bombing has also been
responsible for the massive destruction
of civilian infrastructure, from water
facilities to sewage treatment plants to
hospitals. Particularly devastating has
been the bombing of the port of Hodeidah,
where most of the humanitarian aid has
been entering the country. Two-thirds of
the population now requires food
assistance and a Yemeni child dies every
10 minutes from hunger and the lack of
medical facilities. UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres has called Yemen the
“largest food insecurity emergency in
the world.”
The Saudis are threatening to make
matters significantly worse by launching
a major military campaign in the area of
Hudaidah that will make the port totally
inaccessible.
It’s not
just the Saudis and Houthis who are
responsible for Yemen’s destruction. As
Senator Chris Murphy said,
the United States also has blood on its
hands. President Obama sold massive
amounts of weapons to the Saudis and
helped the Yemen intervention with
logistical support, including refueling
Saudi planes in the air.
Towards the end of his tenure, President
Obama began having second thoughts due
to the mounting civilian death toll,
including a strike on a Yemeni funeral
in October 2016 that killed more than
100 people. That’s why in December 2016,
the Obama administration halted a
planned sale of $390 million in
precision-guided munitions from Raytheon
to the Saudi government.
President
Trump is considering moving forward with
this sale. Human rights groups worry
that the sale could allow the Saudis to
modify thousands of air-to-ground
munitions that could be used in strikes
against civilians. In a letter to Trump
released the same day as the luncheon,
Amnesty International urged Trump not to
sign off on the sale. “There is
substantial risk that Saudi Arabia…could
use new U.S. arms to further devastate
civilian lives in Yemen,” Amnesty
wrote.
“This could implicate your
administration in war crimes or
violations of international humanitarian
law. Amnesty International researchers
have already found both unexploded U.S.
bombs and identifiable fragments of
exploded U.S. bombs among the ruins of
Yemeni homes and other civilian
objects.”
Trump’s
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has
reportedly approved the resumption of
the sale, but it needs White House
approval before it moves forward. “If
approved, this deal would essentially
have President Trump throwing gasoline
on a house fire and locking the door on
his way out,” said Amnesty’s
US Executive Director Margaret Huang.
“President Trump must not approve this
arms deal.”
Break
Free From The Matrix
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The Trump administration has signaled a
desire to step up the fight against the
Houthis in Yemen as part of its plan to
get tough on Iran. It cited Iran’s
support for the Houthi rebels when
putting Iran “on notice” in February.
The Saudi leaders are enthusiastic about
Trump’s hawkish position on Iran. They
also appreciate his support of the oil
industry (proven by naming the CEO of
Exxon as Secretary of State) and his
lack of interest in human rights. And
they are delighted that unlike Yemen,
Saudi Arabia was not included in Trump’s
Muslim travel ban, despite the fact that
more Saudis have killed Americans on US
soil than any other foreign nationals
(remember: 15 of the 19 September 11
hijackers were from Saudi Arabia).
It
seems that the admiration is mutual. As
Trump and Prince Salman sat for a photo
op after lunch, Trump smiled, pointed to
the Saudi delegation, and said, “They
are nice people.” No, Mr. Trump, they
aren’t. They behead people for peaceful
dissent at home. They export the extreme
Wahhabist ideology that fuels terrorist
groups. And they are committing war
crimes in Yemen. The United States
should not be selling them any weapons
or helping in their reckless military
adventure that has left so many Yemenis
dead, displaced and starving.