In wake of airline incident: Drumbeat for US war in Yemen

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Tue Dec 29 09:47:36 CET 2009


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In wake of airline incident: Drumbeat for US war in Yemen
By Bill Van Auken
29 December 2009

In the wake of the abortive Christmas Day attempt by a 23-year-old
Nigerian, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, to detonate a bomb on a
Detroit-bound Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam, there has been
an escalating drumbeat for a wider US military intervention in Yemen.

While US officials initially said they believed that the suspect acted
alone and had no formal ties to any terrorist organizations, this did
not deter leading politicians of both political parties and much of
the US media from immediately raising the prospect of war in Yemen,
where Abdulmutallab has family ties (his mother is Yemeni), and where
Al Qaeda has a presence.

Media reports have subsequently cited unnamed US officials as saying
that Abdulmutallab has told interrogators that he had attended an Al
Qaeda camp in Yemen, while a web site claiming to speak for the
organization claimed credit for the failed bombing.

Whatever the truth of the Yemeni connection to the incident, it has
proven highly fortuitous for the Obama administration, which—parallel
to its Afghanistan escalation—has already launched a secret military
intervention in the impoverished Arab country.

As the New York Times reported Monday, “In the midst of two unfinished
major wars, the United States has quietly opened a third, largely
covert front against Al Qaeda in Yemen.”

Citing unnamed US intelligence and military officials, the Times
reports that the US Central Intelligence Agency has dispatched
“several of its top field operatives with counterterrorism experience
to the country,” while “some of the most secretive Special Operations
commandos have begun training Yemeni security forces in
counterterrorism tactics.”

US military aid to Yemen has been raised to $70 million under the
Obama administration, compared to virtually nothing in 2008.

The reports on increased activities by CIA operatives and Special
Operations military commandos in Yemen follow a series of covert US
airstrikes. On December 17, US warplanes firing cruise missiles
targeted what officials in Washington claimed were Al Qaeda training
camps in the provinces of Sana’a and Abyan. Officials in Yemen,
however, said that the attacks claimed the lives of more than 60
civilians, 28 of them children.

A second airstrike was carried out on December 24 in the remote region
of Shabwa against what US officials described as a meeting of Al Qaeda
operatives. Again, Yemenis in the area said that there had been no
such meeting.

US intelligence officials indicate that one of the intended targets of
the December 24 airstrike was Anwar al Awlaki, a Muslim cleric who is
a US citizen born in New Mexico. While Awlaki has been linked to the
US Army major, Nidal Malik Hasan, who is charged in last month’s mass
shooting at Fort Hood, he has himself been accused of no crime. The
attempt to carry out his extra-judicial execution has provoked not a
hint of criticism from any section of the media or the political
establishment in the US.

US warplanes have also reportedly been used, along with Saudi military
action, against an internal rebellion in northwestern Saada province
near the border with Saudi Arabia. The attacks are aimed at an armed
movement known as the Houthis, named for their former commander, which
was formed to defend the Zaydi Shia population. The dominant group in
the country until 1962, when a Nasserite coup overthrew the ruling
monarchy, the Zaydi population has faced repression and discrimination
at the hands of the present government.

The Houthi fighters charge that US warplanes have launched some 30
attacks on Saada since last August, when the Yemeni regime launched a
military offensive dubbed “Operation Scorched Earth.”

US foreign policy circles have tried to cast the war against the
Houthis as a struggle against Iranian influence in the region. At the
same time, the Yemeni regime has made the improbable claim that the
movement is backed by Al Qaeda, which is based on Sunni fundamentalism
and has engaged in terror attacks against Shia populations.

The US military intervention in Yemen is being carried out in support
of the dictatorial regime of Field Marshall Ali Saleh, who has been
head of state for more than 30 years—first as president of North Yemen
until 1990, and then, after the post-Cold War unification, as
president of the unified country.

Yemen, with 23.8 million people, is the poorest country in the Arab
world. More than half of the population lives below the poverty line.
More than 40 percent are unemployed and 54 percent are illiterate.

In addition to the Houthi movement in the northwest of the country,
the Saleh regime confronts a separatist movement in the south. It has
sought to quell these opposition movements with extreme brutality. In
addition to carrying out military operations of a collective
punishment character that have claimed the lives of thousands of
civilians and turned tens of thousands more into refugees, it has
systematically suppressed political dissent.

Last month, the United Nations Committee against Torture issued a
stinging report on conditions in Yemen, citing “hostage taking,
reports that family members were abducted and held to ensure that
persons sought would give themselves up, as well as arbitrary
detention and forced disappearances.”

“Kidnappings and extrajudicial killings,” were common, according to
the report, including against minors.

“Children of seven or eight years old were imprisoned, held with
adults, and frequently abused,” the report said. “Children were also
sentenced to death and executed.”

The report said that security forces and prison authorities carried
out torture with impunity. A document submitted to the UN committee by
a group of Yemeni human rights organizations listed a number of
opposition activists who have been tortured to death, while describing
detainees—including children—being beaten with cables, burned,
suspended from their hands and arms, raped and threatened with rape.

This is the character of the regime with which, according to the
Times, the Obama “White House is seeking to nurture enduring ties.”
The dispatch of Special Operations commandos and CIA operatives to
Yemen will only intensify this hideous repression.

As the Times article makes clear, the more that Washington aids in
this repression, the more intense and lethal the repression must
become. “The problem is that the involvement of the United States
creates sympathy for Al Qaeda,” a Yemeni state official told the
newspaper. “The cooperation is necessary—but there is no doubt that it
has an effect for the common man. He sympathizes with Al Qaeda.”

Similarly, the Associated Press quoted Gregory Johnsen, a Yemen expert
at Princeton University, as saying that the increased US military
intervention in the country was “probably counterproductive.” The
bombing raids and the resulting video and photographs of women and
children slaughtered by US missiles, he said, provided “a recruiting
field day for Al Qaeda.”

Such concerns appear to carry little weight in Washington or the US
media, as the Obama administration continues to build up for a third
US war in the oil-rich regions stretching from the Middle East to
Central Asia.

The Northwest Airlines incident has provoked calls for more direct
military action from both Democratic and Republican politicians.

Senator Joseph Lieberman, the so-called “independent Democrat” who
heads the Senate Homeland Security Committee, called Sunday for a
“preemptive” military intervention in Yemen.

“Somebody in our government said to me in Sana’a, the capital of
Yemen, Iraq was yesterday’s war,” Lieberman said in a Fox News
interview. “Afghanistan is today’s war. If we don’t act preemptively,
Yemen will be tomorrow’s war. That’s the danger we face.”

Appearing on the same program, Senator Arlen Specter, a Democrat from
Pennsylvania, agreed, saying that a military attack on Yemen is
“something we should consider.”

“Yemen is the new FATA, or it will be,” said Representative Jane
Harman, a California Democrat who chairs the House Homeland Security
subcommittee on intelligence. She was referring to the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas in Pakistan, where the CIA and US military
have been conducting increasingly frequent missile attacks as well as
ground incursions by Special Operations troops.

The US media, as in every other drive toward war, has fallen into
line. The Washington Post published a front-page article Monday
headlined, “Al-Qaeda Group in Yemen Gaining Prominence.”

While acknowledging that the claim that Al Qaeda organized the failed
plane bombing had yet to be proven, the Post article continued, “If
the claim is true, it represents … the emergence of a major new threat
to the United States, the Middle East and the Horn of Africa.”

Characteristically, the cable news outlets were even more blunt and
bellicose. “So are we missing the boat here?” CNN anchor Kyra Philips
asked a counterterrorism “expert” Monday afternoon. “We’re at war in
Afghanistan; we’re at war in Iraq. Should we be at war in Yemen?”

If the US is preparing for yet another war, this time in Yemen, it is
not to eradicate terrorism or protect the American people. The claim
that such methods can accomplish these purported goals can be used to
justify US military intervention virtually anywhere, from Pakistan, to
Somalia, to Indonesia, to the Philippines and the entire Middle East.

The real aim of US imperialism is to impose its hegemonic control over
the world’s strategic energy supplies and the pipelines and shipping
routes that deliver them to the world’s major powers. Yemen commands
the Bab-el-Mandeb strait connecting the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea
and providing access to the Suez Canal, a vital chokepoint through
which tankers carry some three million barrels of oil every day.

The Obama administration was swept into office on the slogan of
“change,” thanks in large measure to the American people’s hostility
to the two wars launched under the presidency of George W. Bush. Now,
rather than ending these wars, the Obama White House is continuing the
occupation of Iraq, sending at least 30,000 additional US troops into
Afghanistan and initiating yet another American military intervention
in Yemen.

These military actions will spell increasing death and destruction for
the peoples of these countries, a growing number of dead and wounded
among the US military, and the increasing likelihood of a far wider
and potentially global conflict.

The growing threat of a US war in Yemen demonstrates the impossibility
of opposing American militarism within the framework of the capitalist
two-party system. This struggle requires the independent political
mobilization of the working class against the Obama administration on
the basis of a socialist program to put an end to the profit system,
which is the driving force of imperialist war.

http://wsws.org/articles/2009/dec2009/yemn-d29.shtml

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