U.S. should cease selling bombs to Saudi Arabia or risk complicity in civilian deaths: HRW
United States should stop selling weapons to Saudi Arabia, or they could be held accountable for war crimes committed in Yemen, Human Rights Watch said.
In a letter to New York Times, Human Rights Watch’s legal and policy director said:
American support for the Saudi-led coalition, including by providing targeting assistance and air refueling of coalition warplanes, makes the United States a party to the conflict in Yemen under international law. This obligates Washington to investigate coalition airstrikes that may be war crimes for which American forces may be liable.
He added:
Given the coalition’s repeated unlawful attacks in Yemen over the last year, which Human Rights Watch and others have documented, the United States should cease selling bombs to Saudi Arabia or risk complicity in civilian deaths.
The US government is spending $255 billion annually to defend Saudi Arabia and other tyrannical monarchies in the Persian Gulf region, says a Saudi scholar in Washington.
“The United States has been spending $255 billion a year since the 1970s, an average of $255 billion a year to protect the [Persian] Gulf monarchies, especially Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain,” said Ali al-Ahmed, a critic of the Saudi monarchy.
“This amount of money makes up 40 percent of the annual American defense budget and it’s greater than the combined budgets of the states of California and Florida,” said al-Ahmed, the founder and director of the Institute for [Persian] Gulf Affairs, an independent think tank in Washington, DC.
“I think it’s really a way for America and the American people to stand against their government policy of supporting the tyrannical and absolute monarchies in the [Persian] Gulf countries,” he added
Under the Obama administration, the United States has entered a record $50 billion in new arms sales agreements with the Saudis.
US weapons sold to Saudi Arabia in 2015
- $7.8 billion between May and September
- $11.25 billion in October
- $1.29 billion in November [Source: HRW]
Yemen Causalities
About 8,200 civilians, including 1,500 children, have been killed or injured [2,800 killed and 5,400 wounded] since violence escalated in March 2015 according to the UN, with many of the deaths caused by explosive weapons including missiles, large aerial bombs, artillery shells, rockets, mortars, and improvised explosive devices (IEDs).
“we are a killer nation, at home and abroad”
Related Links
- Genocide in Yemen Posted on February 15, 2016
- Saudis Paying Blackwater Mercenaries to Kill Yemenis Posted on January 19, 2016
- ‘War in Yemen poses ever-growing threat to children’ Posted on January 12, 2016
- Saudi-led Forces Indiscriminately Airdrop Cluster Bombs on Yemen’s Capital, Sanaa Posted on January 7, 2016
- Mr President, doesn’t thinking about the dead kids in Yemen get you mad? Posted on January 6, 2016
- 3 Children Killed in Yemen Each Day: Save the Children Posted on December 2, 2015
- Yemen Faces Collapse! Posted on November 23, 2015
- 537,000 Yemeni Kids Risk “Severe Malnutrition” – UNICEF Posted on October 18, 2015
- 135 Civilians Killed in Saudi Airstrike on Yemen Wedding Posted on September 29, 2015
- Scale of Human Catastrophe in Yemen ‘Almost Incomprehensible’ Posted on September 20, 2015
- Saudi-led Coalition Using Same Cluster Munition in Yemen as ISIS Fired in Syria Posted on May 31, 2015
- Civilian Mass Murders with Impunity Continue in Yemen, Syria, Iraq… Posted on May 3, 2015
- Saudi Air War Massacre Kills Hundreds in Yemen Posted on April 3, 2015
- “Britain’s humanitarian and foreign policy are pursuing different ends” Posted on December 14, 2015
- Saudi state terrorism leaves 21.2 million Yemenis—82% of population—in need of humanitarian assistance