The US Isn’t Winding Down Its Wars
– It’s Just Running Them At Arm’s Length
Barack Obama is playing all sides against each other, but support for the Saudi
war in Yemen will only spread conflagration in the Middle East
By Seumas Milne
April 13, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Guardian" - So relentless has the violence convulsing
the Middle East become that an attack on yet another Arab country and its
descent into full-scale war barely registers in the rest of the world. That’s
how it has been with the
onslaught on impoverished Yemen by western-backed Saudi Arabia and a string
of other Gulf dictatorships.Barely two weeks into their
bombardment from air and sea, more than 500 have been killed and the
Red Cross is warning of a “catastrophe” in the port of Aden. Where half a
century ago Yemenis were tortured and killed by British colonial troops, Houthi
rebels from the north are now fighting Saudi-backed forces loyal to the ousted
President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi. Up to 40 civilians sheltering at a UN refugee
camp in the poorest country in the Arab world were killed in a
single Saudi air attack last week.
But of course the US and Britain are standing shoulder to
shoulder with the Saudi intervention. Already providing “logistical and
intelligence” support via a “joint planning cell”, the US this week announced it
is
stepping up weapons deliveries to the Saudis. Britain’s foreign secretary,
Phillip Hammond, has promised
to “support the Saudi operation in every way we can”.
The pretext for the Saudi war is that Yemen’s Houthi fighters
are supported by Iran and loyal to a Shia branch of Islam. Hadi, who was
installed after a popular uprising as part of a Saudi-orchestrated deal and
one-man election in 2012, is said to be the legitimate president with every
right to call on international support.
In reality, Iran’s backing for the homegrown Houthis seems to
be modest, and their Zaidi strand of Islam is a sort of halfway house between
Sunni and Shia. Hadi’s term as transitional president expired last year, and he
resigned in January before fleeing the country after the Houthi takeover of the
Yemeni capital Sana’a. Compare Hadi’s treatment with the fully elected former
president of Ukraine, whose flight from Kiev to another part of the country a
year ago was considered by the western powers to have somehow legitimised his
overthrow, and it’s clear how elastic these things can be.
But the clear danger of the Saudi attack on Yemen is that it
will ignite a wider conflagration, intensifying the sectarian schism across the
region and potentially bring
Saudi Arabia and Iran into direct conflict. Already 150,000 troops are
massed on the Yemeni border. Pakistan is under pressure to send troops to do
Riyadh’s dirty work for it. The Egyptian dictator Abdel Fatah al-Sisi has said
he will despatch troops to fight in Yemen “if necessary”.
The Houthi uprising, supported by parts of the army and Hadi’s
predecessor as president, has its roots in poverty and discrimination, and dates
back to the time of the US-British invasion of Iraq more than a decade ago. But
Yemen, which has a strong al-Qaida presence, has also been the target of
hundreds of murderous US drone attacks in recent years. And the combination of
civil war and external intervention is giving al-Qaida a new lease of life.
The idea that the corrupt tyranny of Saudi Arabia, the
sectarian heart of reaction in the Middle East since colonial times, and its
fellow Gulf autocracies –
backed by the Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu – are going to bring
stability, let alone freedom, to the people of Yemen is beyond fantasy. This is
the state, after all, that crushed the popular uprising in Bahrain in 2011, that
funded the overthrow of Egypt’s first elected president in 2013, and has
sponsored
takfiri jihadi movements for years with disastrous consequences.
For the Saudis, the war in Yemen is about enforcing their
control of the Arabian peninsula and their leadership of the Sunni world in the
face of Shia and Iranian resurgence. For the western powers that arm them to the
hilt, it’s about money, and the pivotal role that Saudi Arabia plays in
protecting their interests in the oil and gas El Dorado that is the Middle East.
Since the disasters of Iraq and Afghanistan, the US and its
allies are reluctant to risk boots on the ground. But their military
interventions are multiplying. Barack Obama has
bombed seven mainly Muslim countries since he became US president. There are
now four full-scale wars raging in the Arab world (Iraq, Syria, Libya and
Yemen), and every one of them has involved US and wider western military
intervention. Saudi Arabia is by far the largest British arms market; US weapons
sales to the Gulf have exceeded those racked up by George Bush, and last week
Obama resumed US military aid to Egypt.
What has changed is that, in true imperial fashion, the west’s
alliances have become more contradictory, playing off one side against the
other. In Yemen, it is supporting the Sunni powers against Iran’s Shia allies.
In Iraq, it is the opposite: the US and its friends are giving air support to
Iranian-backed Shia militias fighting the Sunni takfiri group Isis. In
Syria, they are bombing one part of the armed opposition while arming and
training another.
The nuclear deal with Iran – which the Obama administration
pushed through in the teeth of opposition from Israel and the Gulf states –
needs to be seen in that context. The US isn’t leaving the Middle East, as some
imagine, but looking for a
more effective way of controlling it at arm’s length: by rebalancing the
region’s powers, as the former MI6 officer Alastair Crooke puts it, in an
“equilibrium of antagonisms”.
So a tilt towards Iran can be offset with war in Yemen or
Syria. Something similar can be seen in US policy in Latin America. Only a
couple of months after Obama’s
historic opening towards Cuba last December, he signed an order declaring
Cuba’s closest ally, Venezuela, “an unusual and extraordinary threat to US
national security” and imposed sanctions over alleged human rights abuses.
Those pale into insignificance next to many carried out by
the US government itself, let alone by some of its staunchest allies such as
Saudi Arabia. There’s no single route to regime change, and the US is clearly
hoping to use the opportunity of Venezuela’s economic problems to ratchet up its
longstanding destabilisation campaign.
But it’s a game that can also go badly wrong. When it comes to
US support for Saudi aggression in Yemen, that risks not only breaking the
country apart but destabilising Saudi Arabia itself. What’s needed is a
UN-backed negotiation to end the Yemeni conflict, not another big power-fuelled
sectarian proxy war. These calamitous interventions have to be brought to an
end.
© 2015 Guardian News and Media Limited