Yemen at risk, UN humanitarian chief

The United Nations humanitarian agency warned that Yemen is on the verge of famine, with half of its population fully dependent on humanitarian aid for survival. "There is a clear and real danger that the next famine will cross Yemen," UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Mark Lo told the Security Council on Tuesday.
The very small institution of the United Nations tells you that this famine will be "far greater than anything that any professional in this field sees in her working life." According to the Obama administration's policy over the years, the damage has forced Trump to focus on its damage-control duties. Last week, more than a dozen Obama administration graduates issued a letter from the non-profit security organization, calling on the Trump administration to withdraw all US support for the Saudi-led coalition.

The letter was issued a few days after the Ministry of Defense announced a few days on behalf of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to announce a refueling solution in Washington, a move that has been critical of US leftist and Yemeni policies for many years. By 2015, when the Dutch tried to pass the resolution, which will set an independent and impartial, in the field of the conflicting team of UN investigators for war crimes, the United States delegation in New York departure day, while Riyadh derailed efforts. Instead of establishing a fact-finding committee, Washington supports Saudi Arabia's position and calls for a consensus resolution. The Netherlands reduced its draft and then withdrew the investigation entirely with support from Saudi Arabia.
The letter was signed by former Deputy Secretary of State Tony Brink, former US ambassador to the United Nations Samantha, former CIA director John Brennan and former deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes who were unable to attend in a better time. Even before the civil war broke out, Yemen was the poorest country in the Arab world and the world's greatest famine in decades. Fourteen million people are on the verge of starvation, and this number will rise only with fierce battles in Hodeidah disrupting the ports of cities along the Red Sea. US military assistance to Riyadh and Abu Dhabi for three and a half years has reached a humanitarian catastrophe without any strategic objectives or final results. Al Qaeda in Yemen, an attempt to attack the Arabian Peninsula in the United States, used the conflict in various ways; the group stole hundreds of millions of dollars from the banks' vault and recruited more soldiers into its regular file. The advice of former Obama administration officials is correct: "We must end our support and participation in this barbarous conflict.

"However, they do not recognize the unreasonable and constitutionally suspicious participation of the United States. The civil war in Yemen is the first. In addition to recognizing that they failed to resolve the war, the author of the letter also ignored the primary responsibility for putting the United States on the road to Washington's final re-evaluation.

The United States feeds Saudi aircraft, provides intelligence support to Saudi military planners, and Riyadh offers comprehensive diplomatic support in international forums, a policy that is developed, implemented and funded by the Obama administration. During the Obama administration, some people are now advocating a US withdrawal from US participation.

In the case of Samantha Bauer, he strongly opposed Saudi Arabia to the false explosion of civilians in Yemen and the looming humanitarian catastrophe. November 8, chirping her saying, "The Trump government demanded a cease-fire in Yemen is not enough, and now, battles in Hodeidah are deteriorating." If the Authority and its UN team have not taken any measures to limit Saudi Arabia to being outside the difficult wording, this will be an important and morally clear statement.

Ben Rhodes also strongly condemned the strategy of the Saudi war in Yemen. In September, the former national security adviser to the Yemeni government to condemn the Trump Washington policy of "outsourcing" to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and its first partner - this criticism deserves appreciation, but to imitate his own boss, President Barack Obama's policy. Although the Obama White House will ultimately prevent the transfer of groups of munitions destined for GPS in the late stages of the war, the government has long been able to do so when US aid is misused and used illegally.

President Obama collected a total of $ 138 billion in arms sales to Riyadh during his eight-year tenure, making George Bush's $ 16 billion arms management contract look like peanuts.
Since former Obama officials left the government and lived in the White House for each other, they feel the need to say a revised course. But when many of these government officials were in charge, they led the policies they now complain about.

US policy in Yemen has long been ironic. As has been repeated in the last three and a half years, the civil war in Yemen will not win any army. Yet while Washington talks about peace, it continues to push the war by choosing factional violence from another country.

In addition to the fighters themselves, the two-party foreign policy institutions are responsible for Yemen's affairs today: the country is no longer a state in the traditional sense. Before the formulation of US foreign policy and the implementation of strategic restraint exercised by some leaders, is likely to continue to intervene in the war on the United States is not national security interests.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Astonishing Things Your Body Says About You

Fractional sun oriented obs-curation caught in China