White House pressures Saudis in Yemen crisis
U.S. offifficial: ‘We’re in a humanitarian catastrophe here.’
The U. S. is ramping up pressure on Saudi Arabia to ease its blockade of Yemen amid fears that the crisis is slipping further into catastrophe and peoplewill lose access to clean drinking water, President DonaldTrump’s foreign aid chief said.
A Saudi- led coalition’s blockade of theArabworld’s poorest nation is preventing fuel used to pumpwater fromgetting to Yemen’s people, Mark Green, the head of the U.S. Agency for International Development, said in an interview. While the Trump administration has courted Saudi Arabia’s government and continues to provide support for airstrikes over Yemen, Green’s criticismreflflects increasing frustration over the course of the conflflict.
“We’re in a humanitarian catastrophe here, and this is the kind of crisis that does not get better with the passage of time — it gets much, much worse,” Green said in his offiffice at USAID’s headquarters in Washington. “You’re seeing the intensity ratchet up from the highest level of the administration because the crisis is literally getting worse by the hour.”
On Tuesday, the U. S. announced an additional $130 million in food aid to help alleviate the Yemen crisis. The United Nations World Food Program will use themoney to help feed the country’s most vulnerable people, USAID said in a statement.
Green’s comments are the latest in a series of remarks by top administration offifficials, including Trump, demanding that Saudi Arabia ease the blockade. Saudi Arabia’s pressure is threatening to cause widespread famine, as thekingdomfifififights Houthi rebels believed to have backing fromIran. The administrationissued at least three statements last week criticalof the Saudi approach to the conflflict.
At least 14,000 people have been killedorwounded since the Saudi-led offffffffffffensive beganinMarch2015. Almost 1 million people have contracted cholera, and 3 million, out of a population of 28 million, are internally displaced, according to the United Nations.
“Ultimately therewill have to be a political solution to Yemen,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told staff at the State Department headquarters in Washington on Tuesday. “We are engaged with the Saudis trying to get those ports reopened so we canget assistancedelivered.”
Last week, Tillerson was more blunt, calling on Saudi Arabia’s leaders to “think through the consequences” of their actions and be “a little bit more thoughtful.”
“It is well past time for a complete cessation of fifighting, allowing humanitarian access, because it is a catastropheoccurring before our eyes,” Green, 57, said in the interview on Dec. 8. He said there is no substitute for access to Yemen’s ports — permission that the Saudi government has so far refused to give.
The increasingly dire situation in Yemen comes amid a wave of tumult in the MiddleEast linked to the broader rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
TheU.S., likemost governments, was takenby surprise last month when Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri flflew to Riyadh and abruptly resigned before returning to his country weeks later and withdrawing his resignation. The U.S. has also grown frustrated over a continuing dispute between a Saudi- led bloc and Qatar, which hosts a U.S. military base used in the fifififight against Islamic State.
The turmoil also comes as Russian President Vladimir Putin has staked out a key Middle East role, using his military to bolster Syrian President Bashar Assad and courting allies in Egypt and Turkey. Vice President Mike Pencewill travel to the Middle East this month in the wake of Trump’s decision last week to recognize Jerusalemas Israel’s capital, a decision criticized across the Muslim world.
Green, who’s been in his post since August, said his main focus has been what he called the “sheer volume of humanitarian need that we see in the world right now and that nearly all of it’s man-made.”
In S e p t emb e r , h e announced a pledge of $575 million to help ease famines in Yemen, SouthSudan, Nigeria and Somalia. All of those crises have been caused by human conflflict.
A former four-term Wisconsinmember of Congress and ambassador to Tanzania, Green oversees USAID at a time when the Trump administration has proposed slashing its budget and the funding for someof its highest-profifififififileprogramsbyabout 30 percent. The agency has bipartisan support and lawmakers frombothparties say those proposed cuts, like ones envisionedfor the State Department, are unlikely to succeed.
And while Trump and his staffff have championed an “America First” foreign policy that reduces the emphasis onU.S. involvement overseas, Green said he’s had “nothing but support from the White House.”