The Saudi
Slaughter in Yemen
By Adil E.
Shamoo
February
21, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Huffington
Post"
-Although
the Saudis have promised a high-level committee to
investigate civilian deaths from their
airstrikes in Yemen, they continue to strike
civilian targets with countless deaths and
destructions.
For
instance, among those recently killed in an
airstrike on an abandon cement factory were "people
in parked cars, a grocery store owner, a pharmacist
and shoppers." The nationalist insurgents, the
Houthis, have also unfortunately contributed to
the increased casualties as they try to repel the
invaders and defeat the local groups opposed to
them.
The civil
war in Yemen, compounded by the
Saudi invasion, has so far displaced 2.3 million
people. It has left 5,700 dead, among them 2,500
civilians. Two thirds of the deaths have resulted
from airstrikes. And 82% of the population requires
assistance and medical supplies. The United States
fears that 14.4 million Yemenis are at risk of "severe
hunger."
To add to
the misery of the Yemeni people, the United States
just approved the
sale of weapons to the Saudis worth $1.3 billion.
Among the weaponry are air-to-ground ordinances that
included 22,000 bombs. From 2010 to 2014, the United
States sold $90 billion worth of weapons to Saudi
Arabia. Initially, among the U.S. weapons sold to
the Saudis were the internationally banned cluster
bombs.
The Saudis
have feared Yemen for a long time. They worry that
the Houthis and their allies will destabilize the
Saudi regime and export revolutionary zeal to the
Saudi people. The fear of losing their power is why
the Saudi royals, with the help of the majority
Sunni regimes in the Gulf,
launched an air and ground war against Yemen.
Riyadh hopes to reinstate the former government of
President Abd-Rabbu Mansoor Hadi and make Yemen a
satellite country of Saudi Arabia. Facing an
onslaught by the highly equipped Saudi forces with
American help, the Houthis were obliged to ally with
the unsavory former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh,
to defend Yemen. Although calls for talks have gone
nowhere, a new effort is underway to hold
negotiations in Europe under the auspices of the UN.
The Saudis
have made the poorly supported claim that they are
fighting a
proxy war with Iran in Yemen. Unfortunately, the
Obama administration parrots these lies in its
official statements, which the major media then
repeat. The Saudis and the Gulf States have conjured
up Iranian's involvement in order to justify their
war on Yemen. In the meantime, al-Qaeda is deepening
its roots and widening its reach in and around the
country.
US support
for the Saudi regime has continued despite the
invasion and the resulting humanitarian disaster.
The United States provides the Saudis with
intelligence and helps to enforce the current naval
blockade. Moreover, in January,
Secretary John Kerry said, "We have as solid a
relationship, as clear an alliance, and as strong a
friendship with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia as we
ever had, and nothing has changed." Kerry's level of
support for the Saudis contrasts sharply with the
U.S. claims of supporting freedom, democracy, and
human rights worldwide.
Yemen is
one of the poorest countries in the world. The
Saudis and the Gulf states are some of the richest
countries in the world. And yet the Saudis, the Gulf
States, and the United States are destroying Yemen,
which had been a potential outpost of democracy in
the region. Again, the United States derailed a
potential democracy to serve a totalitarian regime,
the Saudi Arabia.
The United
States bears the moral and legal responsibility for
facilitating a potential genocide in Yemen that
results from the current war and the population's
lack of food, basic health, and sanitation. The
United States keeps wondering why the people of the
region continue to harbor the worst terrorists. The
reason lies in part because the United States has
chosen alliances with dictators for the sake of oil
and the stability of corrupt regimes.
Adil E.
Shamoo, a professor at the University of Maryland's
School of Medicine, is an
Institute for Policy Studies associate fellow
and a
Foreign Policy In Focus senior analyst.
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