(Thanks to Kathy Kelly of Voices for Nonviolence for allowing me to use this the first of two remarkably humane and brilliant articles on the situation in Yemen and the plight of its children)
The Long, Brutal U.S. War on Children in the Middle East
November 29, 2018
(first published on the website of The Progressive magazine)
The Long, Brutal U.S. War on Children in the Middle East
November 29, 2018
(first published on the website of The Progressive magazine)
On November 28, sixty-three U.S. Senators voted
in favor of holding a floor debate on a resolution calling for an end
to direct U.S. Armed Forces involvement in the Saudi-UAE coalition-led
war on Yemen. Describing the vote as a rebuke to Saudi Arabia and the
Trump Administration, AP reported
on Senate dissatisfaction over the administration’s response to Saudi
Arabia’s brutal killing of Jamal Khashoggi last month. Just before the
Senate vote, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called current objections to U.S. relations with Saudi Arabia “Capitol Hill caterwauling and media pile-on.”
The
“caterwaul” on Capitol Hill reflects years of determined effort by
grassroots groups to end U.S. involvement in war on Yemen, fed by
mounting international outrage at the last three years of war that have
caused the deaths of an estimated 85,000 Yemeni children under age five.
When children waste away to literally nothing while fourteen million people endure conflict-driven famine, a hue and cry—yes, a caterwaul —most certainly should be raised, worldwide.
How
might we understand what it would mean in the United States for
fourteen million people in our country to starve? You would have to
combine the populations of New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, and
imagine these cities empty of all but the painfully and slowly dying, to
get a glimpse into the suffering in Yemen, where one of every two persons faces starvation.
Antiwar
activists have persistently challenged elected representatives to
acknowledge and end the horrible consequences of modern warfare in Yemen
where entire neighborhoods have been bombed, displacing millions of
people; daily aerial attacks have directly targeted Yemen’s
infrastructure, preventing delivery of food, safe water, fuel, and
funds. The war crushes people through aerial bombing and on-the-ground
fighting as well as an insidious economic war.
Yemenis are strangled
by import restrictions and blockades, causing non-payment of government
salaries, inflation, job losses, and declining or disappearing incomes.
Even when food is available, ordinary Yemenis cannot afford it.
Starvation
is being used as a weapon of war—by Saudi Arabia, by the United Arab
Emirates, and by the superpower patrons including the United States that
arm and manipulate both countries.
During
the thirteen years of economic sanctions against Iraq— those years
between the Gulf War and the devastating U.S.-led “Shock and Awe” war
that followed—I joined U.S. and U.K. activists traveling to Iraq in
public defiance of the economic sanctions.
We
aimed to resist U.S.- and U.K.-driven policies that weakened the Iraqi
regime’s opposition more than they weakened Saddam Hussein. Ostensibly
democratic leaders were ready to achieve their aims by brutally
sacrificing children under age five. The children died first by the
hundreds, then by the thousands and eventually
by the hundreds of thousands. Sitting in a Baghdad pediatric ward, I
heard a delegation member, a young nurse from the U.K., begin to absorb
the cruelty inflicted on mothers and children.
“I
think I understand,” murmured Martin Thomas, “It’s a death row for
infants.” Children gasped their last breaths while their parents
suffered a pile-up of anguish, wave after wave. We should remain haunted
by those children’s short lives.
Iraq's
children died amid an eerie and menacing silence on the part of
mainstream media and most elected U.S. officials. No caterwauling was
heard on Capitol Hill.
But,
worldwide, people began to know that children were paying the price of
abysmally failed policies, and millions of people opposed the 2003 Shock
and Awe war.
Still
the abusive and greedy policies continue. The U.S. and its allies built
up permanent warfare states to secure consistent exploitation of
resources outside their own territories.
During and after the Arab Spring, numerous Yemenis resisted dangerously unfair austerity measures that the Gulf Cooperation Council and the U.S. insisted they must accept. Professor Isa Blumi,
who notes that generations of Yemeni fighters have refused to acquiesce
to foreign invasion and intervention, presents evidence that Saudi
Arabia and the UAE now orchestrate war on Yemen to advance their own
financial interests.
In
the case of Saudi Arabia, Blumi states that although Crown Prince
Mohammad bin Salman wants to author an IPO (Initial Public Offering),
for the Saudi state oil company, Aramco, no major investors would likely
participate. Investment firms know the Saudis pay cash for their
imports, including billions of dollars’ worth of weaponry, because they
are depleting resources within their own territory. This, in part,
explains the desperate efforts to take over Yemen’s offshore oil
reserves and other strategic assets.
Recent polls indicate
that most Americans don’t favor U.S. war on Yemen. Surely, our security
is not enhanced if the U.S. continues to structure its foreign policy
on fear, prejudice, greed, and overwhelming military force. The
movements that pressured the U.S. Senate to reject current U.S. foreign
policy regarding Saudi Arabia and its war on Yemen will continue raising
voices. Collectively, we’ll work toward raising the lament, pressuring
the media and civil society to insist that slaughtering children will
never solve problems.
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