The United States and the
Crucifixion of Yemen
By Paul Street
August 09, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The
United States has killed, maimed,
displaced and otherwise harmed an
astonishing number of people in its
241-year record of
murder and mayhem—including
more than
20 million killed in 37 nations
since 1945.
Murder, Direct and Proxy
Direct
A grisly distinction exists between
those Uncle Sam has directly
assaulted and those he has more
indirectly attacked. Here are just a
few examples from the long record of
direct U.S.-military mass murder
since 1945:
●
Hiroshima (146,000 killed with a
single bomb—what President Harry
Truman called “the greatest thing in
history”) and Nagasaki (80,000): The
arch-criminal atom bombings were
unnecessary and savagely carried out
even though the
U.S. high command knew
Japan was defeated and ready to
accept U.S. surrender terms.
●
Iran Air Flight 655:
On July 3, 1988, the USS Vincennes
crossed into Iranian waters and shot
down an Iranian civilian plane,
blowing 290 people out of the sky.
The Vincennes’ commander was granted
an award for “exceptionally
meritorious conduct.”
● The
“Highway of Death”: U.S. fighter
jets engaged in a frenzied slaughter
of tens of thousands of surrendered
Iraqi troops in 1991.
Lebanese-American journalist
Joyce Chediac testified
that “U.S. forces continued to drop
bombs on the convoys until all
humans were killed. So many jets
swarmed over the inland road that it
created an aerial traffic jam, and
combat air controllers feared midair
collisions.”
●
Fallujah: The U.S. Marines waged
chemical warfare and used
radioactive ordnance in the process
of
leveling a great Iraqi city
in April and November of 2004.
● The
U.S. drone war program (2001 to
present), aptly
described by Noam Chomsky
as “the most extreme terrorist
campaign of modern times”: The
Bureau of Investigative Journalism
reports a minimum number of
3,734 U.S. drone strikes
with nearly 10,000 killed, including
1,427 civilians in Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen, “since
the Bureau began collecting data.”
Indirect
Dreadful as such incidents of direct
imperial butchery are, the United
States may well have killed, maimed
and displaced more people
indirectly, through proxies and
clients.
In
1954, a
CIA-orchestrated coup
removed the democratically elected
and leftist Guatemalan government of
Jacobo Árbenz. Over the next four
decades, U.S,-backed right-wing
Guatemalan regimes killed tens of
thousands of peasants, workers,
students and activists.
In
1960, the
CIA killed
Congo’s first independent head of
state, the leftist anti-colonialist
leader Patrice Lumumba. The United
States subsequently backed the
brutal Congolese dictator Joseph
Mobuto, who killed hundreds of
thousands of people. The U.S. has
been significantly responsible for
as many as 3 million deaths in that
resource-rich country ever since. It
sponsors and protects the
Rwandan dictator Paul Kagame,
whose body count in his own country
and Congo runs into the tens of
thousands.
In 1965
and 1966, the United States worked
with Britain and Australia to help
orchestrate the overthrow of the
democratically elected leftist
government of Indonesia and
the subsequent massacre
of somewhere between 500,000 and 1
million Indonesian peasants,
workers, intellectuals and
activists. Coup General Suharto
received military and economic
assistance from the U.S. over three
decades of subsequent authoritarian
rule.
In December 1975, Suharto got a
green light from his sponsors in
Washington to invade East Timor. The
Indonesian military received
advanced weaponry from the United
States and the U.S. client Israel as
it brutally annexed the poor island
nation and killed at least 180,000
of its inhabitants.
In
1973, a
CIA-engineered coup
overthrew the democratically elected
socialist government of Chilean
President Salvador Allende and
replaced him with the fascist
butcher and close U.S. ally, General
Augusto Pinochet. Pinochet’s regime
killed 30,000
workers, students, peasants,
intellectuals and activists while
introducing
U.S.-imported economic policies
from the University of Chicago
during the 1970s and 1980s.
A
U.S.-sponsored and -equipped fascist
regime in Argentina and
allied death squads
killed as many 30,000 workers,
students, intellectuals and
activists in that country between
1974 and 1983.
In the
late 1970s and 1980s, Washington,
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan created
the extremist Islamo-Wahhabist
forces that became al-Qaida and the
Taliban as part of the U.S. Cold War
with the Soviet Union in order to
destabilize a pro-Soviet regime in
Afghanistan. These
Sunni jihadist forces
have killed hundreds of thousands of
people in Southwest Asia and the
Middle East ever since.
U.S.-sponsored authoritarian regimes
in Central America killed more than
300,000 people during Ronald
Reagan’s two terms. Lavish funding,
training and equipment from
Washington fueled this epic
bloodshed. Victims were murdered and
maimed as punishment for—and
warnings against—participation in
popular struggles
to redistribute land and improve
working and social conditions for
peasants and workers in Guatemala,
El Salvador and Honduras.
Tens of
thousands of Iranians
were executed,
with U.S. economic, political and
military assistance and sponsorship,
by the Iranian dictator Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who was
installed into power after a
CIA-engineered coup
overthrew Iran’s democratically
elected leftist government
in 1953.
Between
1980 and 1988, the U.S. backed Iraq
in an
epic war with Iran.
This horrific conflict produced at
least 1 million Iranian casualties,
including 300,000 soldiers killed
and untold thousands still suffering
from Iraqi chemical weapons
developed with U.S. assistance.
Saudi
Arabia, the most reactionary
government on earth, has slaughtered
tens of thousands of dissenters and
ethnic (Shiite Muslim) minorities
with U.S. arms, economic assistance
and diplomatic cover. It is home to
the extreme Sunni-Wahhabist ideology
that has fueled mass-murderous
jihadists affiliated with al-Qaida
and Islamic State, which have
received lavish funding from Saudi
Arabia. The Saudi kingdom is a
prized U.S. ally. It has been
visited by both Barack Obama and
President Trump in recent years.
Trump went to Riyadh in May to seal
a $110 billion arms
deal with the Saudis.
(For a
longer list of post-1945 global mass
killing operations carried out by
the U.S. military, see my slightly
larger compilation
here.
Also see William Blum’s “Rogue
State: A Guide to the World’s Only
Superpower” and Ward Churchill’s “On
the Justice of Roosting Chickens:
Reflections on the Consequences of
U.S. Arrogance and Criminality.”)
‘An Absolute Shame on Humanity’
Which
brings us back to Yemen, a
developing humanitarian catastrophe
in one of the poorest nations on the
planet. Yemen is an Arab country at
the southern end of the Arabian
Peninsula. It is bordered by the
Gulf of Aden (leading to the Indian
Ocean) on its south, the Red Sea and
Africa to its west, Oman to its east
and the powerful, oil-rich and
U.S.-equipped Saudi regime along its
long northern border. It has been
torn by a “civil war” that began in
March 2015, when Saudi-led forces
launched a military campaign backing
the nation’s Sunni Muslim-embattled
government against allied Shiite
Muslim
Houthi rebels.
More than 10,000 Yemini civilians
have died and more than 44,000 have
been injured in this conflict. Most
have been killed and maimed by more
than two years of airstrikes
conducted by a regional coalition
headed by the U.S.-equipped Saudi
Arabian regime.
More
bombing-related deaths will likely
result in indirect fashion. The
Saudi-led bombing campaign has
devastated much of Yemen’s basic
infrastructure, putting 7 million
Yemenis at risk of famine. Cholera,
a prominent 19th century disease,
has become epidemic there, thanks to
the collapse of water sanitation.
Cholera has already killed nearly
2,000 Yemeni civilians, and 300,000
Yemenis are currently infected.
According to the International Red
Cross, more than 600,000 Yemenis
could contract cholera
before the end of the year.
Sixty percent of the country is
food-insecure, and more than half
the population lacks access to safe
drinking water. A child dies from
preventable causes on the average of
once every 10 minutes in Yemen.
Wolfgang Jamann, CEO of the human
rights organization CARE, recently
took a five-day trip to Yemen. “The
current situation is an absolute
shame on humanity,”
he told reporters.
Direct U.S. Assault
Yemen
has been a significant target of
direct U.S. military attack in
America’s terrorist “global war on
terror.” It was home to the first
known U.S. drone attack outside
Afghanistan in 2002. Hundreds of
U.S. drone and other airstrikes have
targeted Yemen since 2009, including
70 drone strikes
between Feb. 28 and April 2—an
astonishing outburst in “the most
extreme terrorist campaign of modern
times.”
Trump
drew his first military blood in
Yemen. U.S. Navy special forces
carried out a raid—planned by the
Obama administration and handed off
to the incoming Trump team—that
killed 25 civilians, including 10
children in the mountainous Yakla
region of Yemen’s Al Bayda province.
One of the children killed was an
8-year-old girl, Nawar al-Awlaki,
daughter of the Islamist preacher
Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed on
Obama’s orders in a September 2011
U.S. drone strike in Yemen. Nawar’s
older brother, 16-year-old
Abdulrahman, was killed in a second
Obama-commanded drone strike soon
afterward.
Trump’s
continuation of the U.S. slaughter
of al-Awlaki’s children was
consistent with his campaign claim
that he would kill the relatives of
terrorist suspects—a war crime. “The
other thing with the terrorists is
you have to take out their families;
when you get these terrorists, you
have to take out their families,”
Trump
pronounced on Fox News
in December 2015.
A Proxy War
Mainly,
though, it’s been a case of indirect
U.S. assault. As Jesse Mechanic
noted on Huffington Post
in February, “For the almost two
years since the war began, the U.S.
has been a vital ally to Saudi
forces. Like many of our conflicts
over the decades, it’s mostly a
proxy war we’re fighting here. Most
of our influence in this conflict
isn’t direct exactly, but we are
certainly a party to this
destruction.” The U.S. supplies
surveillance, targeting and other
intelligence data to the Saudis. It
refuels Saudi planes and sells the
Saudis weapons, including more than
$20 billion worth of arms in 2016
alone. The ordnance sold includes
cluster bombs, which are banned by
119 countries because they are
wildly inaccurate and kill and maim
civilians for years after military
conflicts end.
America’s direct attacks on Yemen
since 2002 have technically targeted
al-Qaida and affiliated jihadists.
Under Trump, however, there has been
a significant increase in the number
of direct U.S. attacks and
indications of a shift toward more
direct and explicit support for the
Saudi-backed, Sunni Yemen
government’s war on the Houthi
rebels and their rival government.
As
Reuters reported
in late March:
The United States is considering
deepening its role in Yemen’s
conflict by more directly aiding
its Gulf allies battling
Iran-aligned Houthi rebels,
officials say, potentially
relaxing a U.S. policy that
limited American support. …
Trump’s predecessor, Barack
Obama, increasingly sought to
limit U.S. ties to the civil war
in Yemen and his administration
became unnerved by civilian
casualties caused by the
Saudi-led coalition, which have
come under intense international
scrutiny.
The
Trump White House has been
far less squeamish
about directly generating Yemeni
casualties and about explicitly
aiding the Saudis and their Persian
Gulf allies in the fight against the
allegedly Iran-affiliated Houthis.
No
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Government
Grants
-
This
Is
Independent
Media
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‘Say No to American Terrorism’
A
recent short
PBS “Frontline” report
from Yemen was filmed in May. It
shows doctors and nurses working
without pay (the government has no
money to give) to save the lives of
emaciated children plagued by
malnutrition and cholera. It shows
infants near death from hunger and
dehydration and teenagers in
wheelchairs as a result of Saudi-U.S.
bombs.
“I don’t get salary,” one nurse
tells “Frontline” producer Martin
Smith. She explained that “I may be
sick one day soon and will depend on
others to save my life without
salary.”
The nurse told Smith that she
“blame[s] this nation and the
foreign powers who are attacking
this nation. They are attacking the
weak.” As usual, noncombatants
suffer the most.
In the beginning of the “Frontline”
report—a prelude to a longer
“Frontline” documentary scheduled
for next year—Smith blames “two-plus
years of airstrikes by the Saudi-led
coalition, the region’s wealthiest
country [Saudi Arabia] bombing the
region’s poorest country [Yemen].”
Smith notes that the Saudis
rationalize their bombing of the
weak by claiming the rebel
Shiite-Muslim Houthi forces and
Houthi government in the Yemeni
capital of Sanaa are agents of
Riyadh’s regional archrival, Shiite
Iran. But, Smith notes, a visitor to
the nation finds little sign of
Iranian influence in a landscape
devastated primarily by Saudi bombs
and missiles.
“Frontline” implicates the United
States in the heartbreaking human
disaster unfolding in Yemen.
“Americans may not be aware of
American involvement in the war in
Yemen,” Smith says, “but Yemenis in
Sanaa and in northern Yemen know
where the weapons are coming from.”
Smith and his film crew attended a
big “Say No to American Terrorism”
rally protesting Trump’s recent
visit to Riyadh.
Smith reports that he and his
American crew met “absolutely no
hostility” in Yemen. “There was only
a sense,” he says, “that our
government was to blame and ordinary
Yemenis want the world to be aware
of what’s going on.”
“We respect the United States of
America … in our hearts,” one Yemeni
protester told Smith, “but we came
here to express our outrage against
United States policy.”
Some Recommendations
Hopefully, “Frontline” will go
deeper in its forthcoming extended
documentary. If it is serious about
fleshing out the full U.S. role in
the crucifixion of Yemen (skepticism
is warranted when one peruses the
names of the power elite
foundations—Ford, MacArthur, Park,
John and Helen Glessner and Henry
Luce—listed at the end of its
report), then it will do at least
six things.
First, it will mention that the U.S.
funding of the Saudi war machine
goes back many decades and that the
“liberal” Obama White House offered
little resistance to the Saudis’
deadly assault on Yemen—launching
numerous direct U.S. airstrikes into
the country and signing off on huge
arms packages with Riyadh. It will
not blame the central role of the
U.S. in the crucifixion of Yemen
just on the Trump administration.
Second,
it will observe that the U.S. has an
earlier,
Cold War-era history
of deadly, indirect intervention in
Yemen, including CIA sponsorship of
paramilitaries who deployed in south
Yemen, falsely designated as a
“Soviet-run international terrorist
network” under Ronald Reagan.
Third,
“Frontline” should investigate
Riyadh’s U.S-backed claim that
Yemen’s Houthi rebels are agents of
Iranian aggression and regional
expansion—a charge for which little
evidence exists. For its part,
Iran rejects accusations
that it is giving financial and
military support to the Houthis in
the struggle for Yemen and blames
the deepening crisis on Riyadh.
Fourth,
“Frontline” should tie U.S. support
for the Saudis’ war crimes in Yemen
to Washington’s long-standing
special petro-imperial relationship
with the arch-reactionary but
oil-rich Saudi kingdom. As
Jesse Mechanic explained
in February, “Relations between the
U.S. and Saudi Arabia became
strained following the Iran nuclear
deal, and [Washington] relies on
their intelligence and assistance. …
[U.S.] support is more of an attempt
to repair an important relationship
than it is a show of overwhelming
support for the Saudi cause.”
Washington is turning a blind eye to
one of its client state’s crimes in
the case of Saudi Arabia’s war on
Yemen largely because it is
concerned about keeping oil-rich
Saudi Arabia in the United States’
geopolitical pocket in the wake of
Obama’s nuclear deal with Tehran—a
diplomatic triumph (driven by
Washington’s need for Iranian
support in the war against the
Islamic State) that Riyadh has never
accepted.
Fifth,
Frontline also should connect the
Yemen story to Washington’s
related special hostility to Iran,
which the
U.S. imperial establishment
has never forgiven for breaking out
from its own prior subordinate
client-patron relationship with the
U.S. in 1979.
Sixth, it will connect Saudi
Arabia’s war on the Houthis to its
fear of Shiite rebellion within its
own borders. When Saddam Hussein was
overthrown after the 2003 U.S.
invasion, the chaos that ensued in
Iraq “raised the specter of a
[Shiite] alliance across majority
[Shiite] Iraq. Especially
threatening” to Washington, Lehigh
University political scientist
Anthony DiMaggio recently wrote me,
has been “the prospect of such an
alliance including … [Shiites] in
Saudi Arabia, who live under
oppressive conditions mainly in the
east, the oil-rich region of the
country.”
I do not share other world citizens’
willingness to pardon ordinary
Americans from responsibility for
U.S. government crimes, both direct
and indirect, around the world and
in Yemen. The real story of what the
U.S. is doing globally is readily
available for those willing to look
beyond “mainstream” sources and
doctrine. Most Americans remain
willfully ignorant of terrible
transgressions regularly committed
in their name by Uncle Sam and his
allies and clients abroad.
This
ugly indifference extends even to
many on the nominal left, including
Bernie Sanders fans who gave
unconditional support to Sanders
even after he told a peace activist
in Iowa City in 2015 that the Saudis
“are going to have to
get their hands dirty”
in the U.S-led “war on [of] terror.”
“For
Bernie and his supporters,” 2016
Green Party vice presidential
candidate
Ajamu Baraka wrote
two years ago in an essay titled
“The Yemen Tragedy and the Crisis of
the American Left,” “the mischief
that the Saudi government and
private individuals have been
engaged in across the region
financing groups like [Islamic
State] wasn’t dirty enough.”
Neither, apparently, was Riyadh’s
U.S.-equipped campaign to bomb Yemen
back to the 19th century—a campaign
that has turned Yemen into a
shameful humanitarian disaster of
epic proportions.
Paul Street holds a doctorate in
U.S. history from Binghamton
University. He is former vice
president for research and planning
of the Chicago Urban League. Street
is also the author of numerous
books.
This article was first published
by
Truth Dig
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