Is Saudi Arabia Now the Israel of the Gulf?
By Robert Naiman
May 11, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Tehran, Iran - I came to Iran
this week to participate in a
peace boat sailing from Iran to protest the Saudi bombing and blockade of
Yemen. Unfortunately, I had to withdraw from the boat trip for logistical
reasons; my frequent collaborator
Tighe Barry of CODEPINK still plans to be on the
boat, which as of this writing was expected to leave Monday morning local
time.So instead of writing about being on the boat, I
figured I would write about how Saudi Arabia is apparently becoming the Israel
of the Gulf countries: a habitual aggressor in its neighborhood, enabled in its
aggression by the United States. Indeed, it could be argued that Saudi Arabia
has become a more dangerous regional aggressor than Israel, because so far, at
least, Saudi Arabia's aggression in Yemen, like its aggression in Bahrain, has
provoked a less vigorous international reaction, including in the United States,
than Israel's recent war in Gaza.
Like Israel's recent wars in Gaza and Lebanon, Saudi Arabia's
campaign is being
widely judged a failure in a military sense, which means that, like Israel
in Gaza and Lebanon, they have killed many human beings, including many
civilians, for no clear military purpose:
Airstrikes on [former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah]
Saleh's residence and in the northern province of Saada, a Houthi
stronghold, also reflected a desire by the Saudi-led coalition to salvage a
military victory by killing opposition leaders after a six-week bombing
campaign that analysts say has failed to meet most of its original goals.
More than 1,400 people have been killed since March, when
Saudi Arabia launched its aerial campaign against the Houthis, a Shiite
movement that had taken control of Yemen's capital and forced the government
from power. The Houthis have weathered the onslaught and continued their
advance.
According to
Oxfam,
the more than 1,400 people killed so far have included at least 400 civilians.
Like Israel in Gaza, Saudi Arabia pretended that warning
civilians to flee an area that they intend to bomb absolves them from their
obligation under international humanitarian law to avoid civilian casualties.
Like Israel, their claim was
rejected by the United Nations:
That rationalization for Friday and Saturday airstrikes
was rejected by Johannes Van Der Klaauw, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator
for Yemen.
"The indiscriminate bombing of populated areas, with or
without prior warning, is in contravention of international humanitarian
law," Van Der Klaauw said in a statement.
The U.N. official said he was especially concerned about
the airstrikes on Saada, "where scores of civilians were reportedly killed
and thousands were forced to flee their homes after the coalition declared
the entire governorate a military target."
It is certainly a very welcome development that Saudi Arabia
and Yemen's Houthi rebels have finally agreed to a five-day cease-fire to allow
desperately needed humanitarian relief supplies to be delivered to Yemen. Don't
you agree with
Oxfam
that the cease-fire should be permanent? If you agree, you can tell President
Obama and Congress so
here.
Robert Naiman is policy director at
Just Foreign Policy and
president of Truthout's board of directors.