American Hell for Yemen
By Margaret Kimberley
April 02, 2015 "ICH"
- "BAR"
- The U.S.-spawned
whirlwind of carnage and destruction has wrecked the societies of Iraq, Libya,
Syria, Somalia and Yemen, yet most Americans feel themselves blameless. “The
people, the corporate media and the political system all accept that their
government has the right to intervene in the affairs of other nations and that
it is always right and moral in its claims.” They behave like zombified cogs in
an imperial death machine.The United States used
the Al
Anad airbase in Yemen as the staging area for drone attacks which
killed some 1,000 people since 2009. Those crimes were committed under the guise
of fighting terrorism but now that same place is the location of karmic justice
for the American government and its ally, Saudi Arabia. United States Special
Forces fled from Al Anad before it was overrun by Ansar Allah rebels, also known
as the Houthis.
It is true that Saudi Arabia bombed Houthi positions and
threatens to start a ground invasion with the help of Egypt. Both of these
countries are American client states and would not contemplate these actions
without having a green light from Washington.
The story of Yemen and the shifting international alliances
which have brought it to civil war are somewhat complicated. The Houthis ousted
the American and Saudi backed president Hadi who is now on the run. His
predecessor, Ali Abdullah Saleh, was at one time also a Saudi favorite but is
now leading the Houthi advance. While the details can be confusing, one thing is
simple. American imperialism and the war of terror unleashed on that region are
ultimately at fault and continue to destroy nation after nation.
In its zeal to have and maintain hegemony the United States
resorts to brute force and supports others who do likewise. The result is dead
bodies in Iraq, Libya, Syria, Somalia and Yemen, but the decisions that lead to
these crimes are endemic to American policies.
To say that Barack Obama and his Oval Office predecessors made
a mess of the Middle East is the very definition of understatement. Because
America’s goals are never benevolent its policies lurch from one awful decision
to the next with human suffering being the only common denominator.
Washington used jihadists in Libya to overthrow the Gaddafi
government only to have those same groups kill the American ambassador. Now the
U.S. is fighting the same people it supported there just a few years ago.
America fights with al Qaeda and ISIS in Syria but against those same two groups
in Iraq. Washington eventually chose to accept the overthrow of Mubarak in Egypt
but now supports the restoration of a dictatorial regime with another leader.
The United States calls the president of Sudan a war criminal but now fights on
the same side in Yemen. When imperialism
is the intention, events will never turn out as predicted.
The chaos makes sense only when the true nature of American
foreign policy is acknowledged. The shifting alliances and seemingly strange
bedfellows are part of the longstanding doctrine of Manifest Destiny. Manifest
Destiny asserts that the United States has the right to expand its reach
anywhere it wants to. The term originally referred to the conquest of North
America in the 19th century, but the thinking behind it is still a
part of this country’s consciousness.
Most Americans know little or nothing about Yemen or Saudi
Arabia, but still happily refer to themselves in the first person plural when
speaking of their government. They ask, “What should ‘we’ do about
Syria/Iraq/Yemen/Libya?”
While presidents go in and out of office, the people, the
corporate media and the political system all accept that their government has
the right to intervene in the affairs of other nations and that it is always
right and moral in its claims. The numbers of Americans who question whether
Barack Obama ought to be in the business of ousting the president of Syria or
supporting the president of Ukraine are quite slim.
The examples of foolish decisions are endless. President
Reagan made deals with Iran but then instigated an Iraqi attack on Iran. Later
the U.S. attacked Iraq in two different wars. The destruction of that country
led to a brutal sectarian war, and to the rise
of the Houthis in Yemen.
Yemen is now the epicenter of imperialism run amuck. The
Saudis fear that the Shi’a Houthis will be supported by their rival Iran, which
the United States now wants to come to terms with in nuclear energy
negotiations. Saudi Arabia is therefore on the side of Israel in attempting to
scuttle any agreement. There is still no honor among all the thieves.
Whatever policy decisions Washington chooses to make will
result in unintended consequences and more violence. Every escalation brings
greater danger and America still has no rival for bringing destruction to
millions of people. Violence and chaos have become not just the means to certain
ends, but ends in and of themselves. That is just how America rolls.
Margaret Kimberley‘s
Freedom Rider column appears weekly in BAR, and is widely reprinted elsewhere.
She maintains a frequently updated blog as well as at http://freedomrider.blogspot.com. Ms.
Kimberley lives in New York City, and can be reached via e-Mail at
Margaret.Kimberley(at)BlackAgendaReport.com.