(ZHE Op-ed)—Have you noticed the almostcomplete lack of video footageshowing the ongoing Arab and US coalition aerial bombardment of Yemen’s key port city of Al Hudaydah?
Reutersreportsthe following:
“People are scared. The warships are terrifying and warplanes are flying overhead all the time,”university student Amina, 22, who lives near the port, told Reuters by telephone.
“People are fleeing the city to the countryside, but for those with no relatives there or money,there is no escape.”
Don’t expecta Yemeni version ofthe “White Helmets”to emerge with high-tech cameras, slick new gear, and professional uniforms capturing Yemen’s starvation and slow deathunder US, Saudi, and UAE warplanes.
Don’t expect prime time news broadcasts to feature images of emaciated Yemeni babies—easily located on social media channels in the thousands.
And yet he numbers are staggering, asReutersreports further:
The United Nations says 22 million Yemenis need humanitarian aid, and the numberat risk of starvation could more than double to more than 18 million by year endunless access improves.
No, there won’t be rebel leaders in Yemen beamed into CNN studios via Skype to detail the suffering of civilians under the brutal siege,because this isn’t Syria… it’s Yemen, where the US and its allies have not only imposeda full military blockade of land, air, and sea on an urban population of half a million people, but have also ensured acomplete media blackoutof on the ground footage and reporting.
As we notedin our initial coveragethecomplete media and humanitarian blockadeon the contested port city of Al Hudaydahmeans confirmation of the rapidly unfolding events have been hard to come by, though we featured what’s purported to besome of the earliest social media footage of the assault, now in its second day.
But what is firmly established concerning the conflict?
First,theWall Street Journalhascharacterized the US role in the new operation as actually“deepening”asUS intelligence will provide “information to fine-tune the list of targets”.The US has long been a lead and integral part of the coalition(also includingBahrain, Kuwait, UAE, Egypt, Sudan, and with the UKas a huge supplier of weapons) fighting Shia Houthi rebels, which overran theYemen’s north in 2014.
Saudi airstrikes on the impoverished country have involved thedirect assistance of USintelligenceand use of American and British military hardware. Cholera has also made acomebackamidst the appalling war-time conditions, and civilian infrastructure such as hospitals have been bombed by the Saudi-UAE-US coalition. The coalition claims to ultimately be thwarting Iranian ambitions inside Yemen.
Second, the ongoing Arab and US coalition siege ofYemen’s major port city through which 80% of all humanitarian aid for the war-torn country flows could result inthe greatest humanitarian disaster and mass starvation in all of recent historyaccording to the United Nations.
The city of half a million is one of the sole lifelines of support for Yemen’s over 27 million people from the outside world, thus analysts are predicting this to be a catastrophe for the country’s civilian population in a warTheNew York Timesnotesis already“classified asthe world’s worst humanitarian disaster“with“more than 75 percent of the population… dependent on food aid”.
A newReutersreportestimates that“8.4 million people are on the verge of starvation, potentially the world’s worst famine for generations.”
And yet on Thursday the US State Departmentannounced it would resume fundingfor the controversial SyrianNGOstate-funded group, the White Helmets,to the tune of $6.6, with presumably more American taxpayer funds to come.The group has long been exposed asessentially playing rescue squad for al-Qaedaand is acreation of international PR firms pushing for regime change in Syria.
But again,might Yemen get its own US-funded version of the White Helmets to rescue civilians?
Why is there no video or photographic media coverage of US, Saudi, and UAE bombs raining down on masses of civilians in AlHudaydah? Of course, the answer is obvious.
* * *
Early in the Yemeni war the prestigiousColumbiaJournalism Reviewproduced a short study which attempted to explain, according to its title,Why almost no one’s covering the war inYemen(in short genocide is OK when US allies do it, according to the actions and words of Western political leaders).
Other analysts have sincecriticizedthe media and political establishment’s tendency to exaggerate Iran’s presence inYemenand further willingness to ignore or downplay the clear war crimes of US client regimes in the gulf (the US-Saudi coalition claims it must liberate Al Hudayda to cut off Iranian weapons flowing to Houthi rebels).While Iran-aligned states and militias are framed as the region’s terrorizers,the Saudi-aligned coalition’s motives are constantly cast aspraise-worthy and noble.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon has long reiterated its official (Orwellian) line that the US military’s deep level of assistance to the Saudi bombing campaign is actually geared towardreducingcivilian harm. One glaring example is contained in anAl-Monitor reportfrom earlier this year:“Speaking to reporters at the Defense Department on the heels of a meeting with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman last week,Mattis said a contingent of US advisers deployed to help with intelligence sharing are engaged in a ‘dynamic’ role to help ensure a reduction in civilian harm.”
ButAl Monitoralso noted thatcivilian deaths had continued unabated, while further quoting Mattis as saying,“This is the trigonometry level of warfare.”
So the official Pentagon line on Yemen seems to be (confirmedrepeatedly this week) thatas it directly assists the Saudis in dropping bombs on civilians, it is actually “helping” those very civilians.
Op-ed byTyler Durden/ Republished with permission /Zero Hedge/Report a typo