Why Are We Ignoring the War on Yemen?
By Sonali Kolhatkar
Yemen has been the target of a brutal U.S.-backed
war led by Saudi Arabia. While ordinary civilians are suffering
horrific violence and starvation, there is deafening silence from
the U.S. and others who claim to be defenders of human rights.
The situation is so bad now that nearly every
major global human rights organization has issued dire warnings of
the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in the Persian Gulf’s poorest
nation.
Since the Saudi regime began a bombing campaign in
March, the situation has deteriorated rapidly as access to food and
other aid has been stymied. In response, the United Nations in early
July
declared a Level 3 humanitarian emergency—the highest level
possible. U.N. Envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed described Yemen as
“one step away from famine.”
But the bombing has had direct consequences, too.
In late July, Human Rights Watch
accused Saudi Arabia of war crimes after an airstrike on two
residential buildings killed 65 civilians. Ten of the victims were
children. “With no evident military target, this attack appears to
be a war crime,” said an HRW researcher.
Amnesty International also published a
scathing report with a title that says it all: “Yemen: Bloody
trail of civilian death and destruction paved with evidence of war
crimes.” Echoing the HRW report, Amnesty researchers found “a
pattern of strikes targeting heavily populated areas including
civilian homes, a school, a market and a mosque. In the majority of
cases no military target could be located nearby.”
Children are especially vulnerable.
UNICEF called attention to their plight in Yemen, citing the
unimaginably high number of 10 million children in need of immediate
assistance. Nearly 400 children have been killed and 600 injured
since March. According to the report, “Yemen is one of the most
terrifying places in the world to be a child.”
Overall,
more than 4,000 people have been killed in Yemen, more than a
thousand estimated to be civilians.
On Aug. 11, Peter Maurer, president of the
International Committee of the Red Cross, added his voice to the
chorus of warnings. “The humanitarian situation is nothing short of
catastrophic,”
he said after a three-day visit to Yemen. “Every family in Yemen
has been affected by this conflict. … Medicines can’t get in so
patient care is falling apart. Fuel shortages mean equipment doesn’t
work. This cannot go on. Yemen is crumbling.”
The same day, Teresa Sancristóval, who heads up
Doctors Without Borders’ Emergency Unit, also
warned of multiple crises, including a severe water shortage,
lack of medicines and vaccines, and needless deaths exacerbated by
the incessant bombing. She wrote, “In some moments, I felt that the
conflict in Yemen is much more of a war against civilians than a war
against armed groups.”
Ignoring the outcry from these high-profile human
rights groups, Saudi Arabia just
bombed yet another port, a main one used to transport aid to
civilians in northern Yemen. In response, Save the Children’s Edward
Santiago said, “The bombing of Hodeida port is the final straw. ...
The impact of these latest air strikes will be felt most strongly by
innocent children and families.”
Not only has the United States blessed the brutal
Saudi air war on Yemen, it has taken an active role in it. Recently
“the Pentagon more than doubled the number of American advisors to
provide enhanced intelligence for airstrikes,”
the Los Angeles Times reported. This has directly contributed to
a surge in airstrikes and subsequent civilian casualties. The L.A.
Times rightly pointed out that Yemen’s plight has been “vastly
overshadowed” by the U.S. war on Islamic State.
In a nutshell, when Yemenis toppled their longtime
former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, in the wake of Arab Spring
revolutions such as those in Egypt and Tunisia in 2011, they ended
up with Vice President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi as their new leader.
But Hadi was pushed out by a Shiite rebel group known as the Houthis,
even as a low-level U.S. drone war continued against al-Qaida.
Fearing Iranian aid to the Houthis along its southern border, Saudi
Arabia punished Yemen with an aggressive air war actively sponsored
by the Obama administration.
Adding to the air war, a new, aggressive,
ground-based effort began in earnest in early August. The United
Arab Emirates, a small but extremely wealthy country,
has deployed a major contingent of troops on the ground in
Yemen. Like Saudi Arabia, the UAE is a major U.S. ally and a loyal
customer of American military weaponry. A recent
analysis found that U.S. arms sales to the Middle East exploded
under President Obama, peaking at more than $40 billion in 2012,
compared with just over $10 billion under George W. Bush. The $60.7
billion worth of weapons during Obama’s tenure went mostly to Saudi
Arabia (67 percent) and the UAE (21 percent), the two main
aggressors in Yemen.
Among those weapons were cluster munitions, which
Saudi Arabia has
allegedly deployed against Yemen’s civilians. Cluster bombs are
widely banned by most of the world, except for a handful of
countries—including the U.S. and Saudi Arabia. They are condemned
specifically for indiscriminately affecting civilian populations.
But, as so many humanitarian groups are pointing out, the well-being
of ordinary Yemenis seems to be a low priority for the warmongers.
Although Saudi Arabia cites its fear of Iranian
influence as impetus for the war (couched in rhetoric about
restoring Hadi’s rule), there is little evidence that Iran is
actually helping the Houthis. Certainly the Iranian regime has sent
aid shipments to Yemen, many of which have been thwarted by Saudi
Arabia despite the desperate need. But there is no evidence of
military or logistical Iranian support.
Bizarrely, even
Obama has asserted that Iran has not boosted the Houthi
rebellion. On the contrary, he claimed Iran tried to discourage the
Houthis, telling the press, “There were moments where Iran was
actually urging potential restraint.” Obama has had to portray Iran
as a “rational” actor in his administration’s recently brokered
nuclear agreement with the Islamic Shiite regime. So why has he
remained silent on Saudi bloodshed in Yemen, and worse, actively
participated by providing advice and weapons?
The answer may lie in the fact that the U.S. has
long waged its own one-sided drone war in Yemen and shamelessly
continues to do so even as the country is falling apart. On Aug. 12,
the latest drone strike in the eastern part of the country
reportedly resulted in the extrajudicial assassinations of five
suspected members of al-Qaida. The drone wars have gone hand in hand
with greater terrorist threats rather than fewer, evident in
al-Qaida’s Yemen chapter
recently calling for more anti-U.S. attacks.
The richest and most powerful country in the
world—the United States—is aiding the richest and most powerful
countries in the Middle East—Saudi Arabia and the UAE—in bludgeoning
the poorest in the region and one of the least powerful countries in
the world: Yemen. What is remarkable about the Obama
administration’s silence on Yemen’s civilian suffering is that it is
mirrored by everyone else’s muteness. Neither right- nor left-wing
forces in the United States have taken much interest in the carnage
and starvation there.
International human rights groups like UNICEF,
Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, International Committee
of the Red Cross, Doctors Without Borders and Save the Children are
united in their denunciation of the catastrophic war in Yemen. The
rest of the world would do well to heed the call for an immediate
end to the atrocities.
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