U.S. Provides Cover for Use of Banned Weapons
in Yemen
By Thalif Deen
August 22, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "IPS"
- UNITED NATIONS,
Aug 21 2015 (IPS) - The United States
is providing a thinly-veiled cover virtually legitimising the use of
cluster bombs – banned by an international convention – by Saudi
Arabia and its allies in their heavy fighting against Houthi rebels
in Yemen.
Asked if cluster bombs are legitimate weapons of
war, “if used appropriately”, U.S. State Department spokesman John
Kirby told reporters: “If used appropriately, there are end-use
regulations regarding the use of them. But yes, when used
appropriately and according (to) those end-use rules, it’s
permissible.”
“These weapons can’t
distinguish military targets from civilians, and their unexploded
sub-munitions threaten civilians, especially children, even long
after the fighting.” -- Ole Solvang of HRW
But Steve Goose of Human Rights Watch told IPS the
State Department official makes reference to “end use regulations.”
“Any recipient of U.S. cluster munitions has to
agree not to use them in populated areas. Saudi Arabia may be
violating that requirement. State and Defence Department officials
are looking into that,” he said.
The Saudi-led coalition of Arab states, which has
been uninterruptedly bombing rebel-controlled Yemen, includes Egypt,
Jordan, Morocco, Sudan, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar and
Bahrain.
The 80 non-signatories to the convention include
all 10 countries, plus Yemen. The United States, which is providing
intelligence to the Saudi-led coalition, is also a non-signatory.
Asked whether it would be alarming or
disconcerting if the coalition, is in fact, using American-supplied
cluster bombs, Kirby told reporters early this week: “I would just
tell you that we remain in close contact, regular contact with the
Saudi Government on a wide range of issues in Yemen.
“We’ve urged all sides in the conflict – you’ve
heard me say this before – including the Saudis, to take proactive
measures to minimize harm to civilians. We have discussed reports of
the alleged use of cluster munitions with the Saudis,” he added.
Goose said a U.S. Defence Department official has
already said the U.S. is aware that Saudi Arabia has used cluster
munitions, so there is no real need for the State Department to
confirm or deny.
“Cluster munitions should not be used by anyone,
anywhere, at any time due to the foreseeable harm to civilians,”
Goose added.
He also said the States Parties to the Convention
on Cluster Munitions are meeting for the first Five Year Review
Conference of the convention next month and are expected to condemn
Saudi use and call for a halt.
Cluster bombs have also been used in Syria, South
Sudan, Ukraine and by a non-state actor,
the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), among
others.
The Convention on Cluster Munitions, which was
adopted in 2008, entered into force in 2010. A total of 117 states
have joined the Convention, with 93 States parties who have signed
and ratified the treaty.
The convention, which bans cluster munitions,
requires destruction of stockpiles, clearance of areas contaminated
by cluster munition remnants, and assistance to victims.
Human Rights Watch, a founding member of the
international Cluster Munition Coalition, the civil society campaign
behind the Convention on Cluster Munitions and publisher of Cluster
Munition Monitor 2014, said last May that banned cluster munitions
have wounded civilians, including a child, in attacks in Houthi-controlled
territory in northern Yemen.
HRW is preparing another report on new use of
cluster munitions, scheduled to be released next week.
On Sep. 3, the
Cluster Munition Monitor 2015, which provides a global overview
of states’ adherence to the ban convention, will be released in
Geneva.
An HRW team, in a report released after a visit to
the Saada governorate in northern Yemen, said the Saudi-led
coalition and other warring parties in Yemen “need to recognise that
using banned cluster munitions is very likely to harm civilians.”
Ole Solvang, senior emergencies researcher at HRW,
said, “These weapons can’t distinguish military targets from
civilians, and their unexploded sub-munitions threaten civilians,
especially children, even long after the fighting.”
In one attack, which wounded three people, at
least two of them most likely civilians, the cluster munitions were
air-dropped, pointing to the Saudi-led coalition as responsible
because it is the only party using aircraft.
In a second attack, which wounded four civilians,
including a child, HRW said it was not able to conclusively
determine responsibility because the cluster munitions were
ground-fired, but the attack was on an area that has been under
attack by the Saudi-led coalition.
In these and other documented cluster munition
attacks, HRW has identified the use of three types of cluster
munitions in Yemen and called upon the United States to denounce
their use.
HRW also said the discovery of cluster munitions
in Houthi-controlled territory that had been attacked by coalition
aircraft on previous occasions and the location within range of
Saudi artillery suggest that Saudi forces fired the cluster
munitions, but further investigation is needed to conclusively
determine responsibility.
Edited by Kitty Stapp
The writer can be contacted at
thalifdeen@aol.com