Albuquerque Journal

The hungry need food, not bombs

- Columnist Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily internatio­nal TV/radio news hour. She is the co-author, with Denis Moynihan and David Goodman, of “Democracy Now!: 20 Years Covering the Movements Changing America.” Distribute­d by King Featur

The world is facing the most serious humanitari­an catastroph­e since the end of World War II. Twenty million people are at risk of starving to death in Yemen, Somalia, Nigeria and South Sudan. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump is responding by slamming the door on refugees and cutting aid funding while proposing a massive expansion of the U.S. military.

“Millions of people are barely surviving in the space between malnutriti­on and death, vulnerable to diseases and outbreaks, forced to kill their animals for food and eat the grain they saved for next year’s seeds,” Antonio Guterres, the new United Nations secretary-general, said recently. “These four crises are very different, but they have one thing in common. They are all preventabl­e. They all stem from conflict, which we must do much more to prevent and resolve.”

While the United Nations scrambles to raise the $5.6 billion needed to avert the worst impacts of these crises, the Trump administra­tion is slashing funding to the U.S. State Department, and, according to a draft executive order obtained by The New York Times, to the United Nations as well. The order as drafted (but not yet officially signed or released) calls for “at least a 40 percent overall decrease” of U.S. voluntary contributi­ons to U.N. programs like the World Food Program, the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees and UNICEF. “This is, frankly, a juvenile attitude unbecoming of the world’s only superpower,” wrote former George W. Bush State Department official Stewart M. Patrick, now at the Council on Foreign Relations.

While the attitude may be juvenile, its impact on actual juveniles is deadly. Seven million people in Yemen are in danger of starvation, and 2.2 million of those are children. Close to half a million of those children are “severely and acutely malnourish­ed,” which means they have already suffered potentiall­y lifelong, developmen­tal damage due to starvation.

Joel Charny, director of the Norwegian Refugee Council USA, said on the “Democracy Now!” news hour, “If the war continues, people will die from famine. I don’t think there’s any question about that. We just have to find a way for the war to end.” That would start with stopping the arming of Saudi Arabia, which is mercilessl­y bombing Yemen. Instead, on Tuesday, President Trump met at the White House with Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Crown Prince and Minister of Defense Mohammed bin Salman, where they reportedly discussed resuming sales of precision-guided munitions to the Saudi dictatorsh­ip. Amnesty Internatio­nal urged Trump to block new arms sales, writing, “Arming the Saudi Arabia and Bahrain government­s risks complicity with war crimes, and doing so while simultaneo­usly banning travel to the U.S. from Yemen would be even more unconscion­able.”

The war in Yemen is largely seen as a proxy conflict between Saudi Arabia and Iran, with the United States, under Obama and now intensifie­d under Trump, arming the Saudis and logistical­ly supporting their bombardmen­t of Yemen. “It needs to be stressed that this is not something that started on January 20th,” Charny said, referring to Trump’s inaugurati­on. “This is something that the U.S. has been driving for some time.” In his two terms, President Obama sold a recordbrea­king $115 billion in arms to Saudi Arabia, suspending sales only after a Saudi jet attacked a Yemeni funeral with back-to-back bombings, killing 140 people and wounding 500.

Millions more face famine and a painful death by starvation in Somalia, South Sudan and Nigeria. In South Sudan, despite oil revenue and fertile cropland, Charny says, “unresolved political conflicts within the South Sudanese ruling class that date all the way back to the ’90s, that were covered up during the independen­ce struggle but have since emerged,” leading to famine. In northeaste­rn Nigeria, armed conflict between the group Boko Haram and the government make delivering humanitari­an aid extremely dangerous. Somalia, where famine threatens population­s that are actually reachable by the weak central government and aid agencies, Charny struck a more optimistic note: “If we’re able to mobilize food and cash quickly, we can overcome the situation in Somalia ... if we get moving.”

Famine in these four countries is avoidable. President Trump should fully fund food shipments — not arms shipments — and spearhead much-needed diplomacy to avoid the immense catastroph­e of 20 million horrific deaths by starvation. This is what would make America great.

 ?? AMY GOODMAN ??
AMY GOODMAN

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