A
father's grief and the Made in USA bomb dropped in
Yemen
Cluster bomb, a type of munition invented by the
Nazis to kill as many as possible, used in coalition
strike on farm that killed Raja, 14
By Bethan McKernan in Saada.
October 04, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
The last day of 14-year-old Raja Hamid Yahya al-Oud’s
life began like any other.
She got up early along
with the rest of the family because there was always
a lot of work to do on the farm in the spring
planting season. White drones had intermittently
circled above their cornfields for the last few
weeks, but there was no sign of them that morning.
Raja and her mother, Amira, liked to take breaks
under the acacia trees about 200 metres from the
house. At 4pm, this was to become her final resting
place.
The plane was flying too high for them to hear it
coming but Amira said the sound the CBU-52 B/B
cluster bomb made as it rained 220 deadly
submunitions on their heads will stay with her
forever. Some exploded on impact while others, still
armed, fell into the fields.
Screaming for her daughter, Amira saw Raja’s
twisted body under a small tree. Her jaw and entire
right side had been ripped apart and blood had
already dyed the sand around her black. A neighbour,
Hamoud Mohammed al-Ghar, dodged the remaining
submunitions to pick Raja up and then ran with her
to the nearest road to find a car to take her to
hospital. “I knew the girl was already dead,” he
said. “But I had to try.” The drones circled ahead
the entire time.
Raja died on 23 March 2018. But the story of the
bomb that is believed to have killed her stretches
back decades earlier. Using the serial number and
other technical information on the CBU-52 B/B’s
outer shell, the Guardian traced the munition from
its manufacture in Milan, Tennessee, to Sahar farms,
in north
Yemen, where it ended a child’s life.
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Cluster munitions were invented by
the Nazis and had become a standard
weapon of war across the world by the
1970s, designed to kill as many people
as possible.
They usually consist of a hollow shell filled
with hundreds of submunitions that disperse over an
area as big as several football pitches as it falls
through the air. They either explode on impact or
are triggered when moved or stepped on, firing
hundreds of fragments of metal that travel at the
speed of bullets.
The submunitions remain a threat for decades once
deployed and those from older designs often resemble
shiny silver orbs around the size of a tennis ball,
making unexploded ordnance especially attractive to
curious children. Hundreds of people worldwide die
each year after coming into contact with unexploded
cluster bombs, with about 300 casualties a year in
Vietnam alone.
In 2008 an international treaty called the
convention on cluster munitions severely limiting
the use, transfer and stockpiling of cluster bombs
was adopted by 30 countries. By 2018 it had been
signed by 120 states. The US, which sells arms to
Saudi-led forces fighting in Yemen, was not one of
them.
“Cluster munitions went through a proportionality
test to measure military advantages gained versus
civilian harm of their use,” said Rawan Shaif, the
lead Yemen researcher at the open source
investigative organisation
Bellingcat, of the Geneva conventions relating
to the protection of victims of armed conflict.
“There’s no military advantage in using a cluster
munition in a farm, unless your aim is to make that
area uninhabitable for generations of civilians and
military alike.”
The cluster bomb that killed Raja was
manufactured at the Milan Army Ammunition Plant in
1977. The large site, just north of Jackson in west
Tennessee, encompasses 231 miles (372km) of roads
and 88 miles (142km) of railways and is nicknamed
Bullet Town by residents.
Milan’s fortunes have risen and fallen with that
of the plant: work there has ebbed and flowed with
America’s wars. Most of its ordnance and mortar
production lines have been moved to Iowa by American
Ordnance, the private contractor operating the
plant. In 2013 it employed just 113 people, down
from a peak of 10,000 during the second world war.
By 1977 thousands of cluster bombs like the one that
killed Raja were rolling off the production line.
The US no longer manufactures CBU-52s: it has
long since upgraded to “smart” computer-guided
cluster bombs with supposedly more accurate arming
and targeting systems. One possible reason a 1977
bomb found its way to Sahar farms, in Yemen, in 2018
is because the US has such a large stockpile of the
weapons.
While other countries were adopting the
international convention on cluster munitions in
2008, the Pentagon defended its use of them as a
“military necessity”. However, it conceded to
international criticism by instituting a policy to
reduce the failure rate of the munitions – ie the
amount of unexploded ordnance left behind – to 1% or
less after 2018, although that policy was actually
scrapped by Donald Trump 2017.
In the interim, a good way of reducing the
stockpile of outdated weapons – and making some
money – was to sell them. Data from 2017 showed the
US still had some 2.2m cluster bombs in its arsenal.
“Many nations, including the US, Germany, and
Switzerland, have taken steps in recent years to
bolster both their pre-export due diligence, and
their post-delivery verification methods,” said Nic
Jenzen-Jones, the director of Armament Research
Services, a specialist technical intelligence
consultancy. “Nonetheless, there are a lot of arms
that have been exported prior to these changes that
muddy the waters in terms of how researchers can
track and trace items of interest.”
The US has been selling weapons, planes, tanks
and ordnance to Saudi Arabia for decades and
permitting its arms manufacturers to export: it has
licensed $138bn (£112bn) to the kingdom in the last
10 years alone, according to research by the US
thinktank the Center for International Policy.
Officials under Barack Obama worried that sales,
after Riyadh launched its air campaign against
Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels in
March 2015, could amount to complicity in war
crimes under international laws that could name the
US as a co-belligerent, but in 2016 went ahead with
a $1.3bn sale anyway.
Bomb sales continue: Donald Trump, who has made
Saudi Arabia the cornerstone of his Middle East
policy, overrode objections from Congress in March
to complete the sale of more than $8bn worth of
weapons to Riyadh, its coalition partner the United
Arab Emirates coalition partner, and Jordan.
The total extent of export licences to the
kingdom is not known, and neither is it known when
the bomb that killed Raja was sold. The SIPRI Arms
Transfers Database, the world’s most extensive
record, yielded no results: it contains just a
fraction of true sales, as pre-digital
record-keeping was poor and states cite national
security concerns to avoid disclosing records.
It is possible the CBU could have been sold by
the US years ago to a third party state and then
sold on again to Saudi Arabia: cluster bomb sales to
Riyadh were officially stopped in 2016. The US
Department of Defense and the state department did
not respond to requests for information. Such
inquiries are usually met with no comment.
Washington says US supplies of “smart weapons”
are helping the coalition reduce civilian casualties
– but as Raja’s death shows, old US-made dumb bombs
are still being used.
What we do know is Sahar farms was bombed on 23
March last year after the area had been surveyed by
drones for weeks. “We are just farmers,” Hamid Yahya
al-Oud, Raja’s father, said over tea in his living
room, surrounded by his six remaining children.
“Look outside. There’s our well, there’s our goats.
Why would there be Houthis here?”
At the time of publication, the coalition had not
responded to the Guardian’s requests for comment.
Sahar farms lies in the countryside of Saada in
north Yemen, the Houthi heartland on Saudi Arabia’s
border. The whole province is littered with
bombed-out buildings, bridges, roads and unexploded
ordnance. The green cigar-like shell of the CBU-52
B/B cluster bomb is one of the most common of those
dropped on the area, according to Abdullah Umayyad,
the manager of the UN-funded Yemen Executive Mine
Action Centre (Yemac) field office in Saada.
The coalition rarely acknowledges civilian
casualties from airstrikes, making justice or even
simple answers for affected families about why they
were targeted almost impossible.
“It took two days to clear out Sahar farms after
that strike,” said Umayyad. “The work is very
dangerous. Three men have been killed in clearance
operations here in Saada. My old boss lost his
hands, eyes and nose after trying to disarm a
cluster bomb submunition last year.”
Despite condemnation from human rights groups
over airstrikes in Yemen, Yemac’s records suggest
more cluster bombs are being dropped on Saada than
ever: at least 147 cluster munitions were recovered
in the province in the first six months of 2019, up
on 122 in the same period of 2018.
Its record-keeping, however, is spotty and
individual items are not catalogued. Questions of
who, what and why when it comes to bombings fall
outside its remit: the political fallout could
impact the team’s ability to work across the
war-torn country.
US-made bombs rain down on north Yemen with
almost total impunity.
At Sahar farms, the drones have been back in the
last two months. “They already killed my daughter,”
said Hamid. “Now they’re back for more.”
Photographs and video by Achilleas Zavallis
This article was originally published by "The
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