Los Angeles Times

U. S. to blacklist Houthis in Yemen

- By Nabih Bulos Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Washington contribute­d to this report.

Plans to target the rebel group with terrorism designatio­ns threaten to exacerbate the war- torn nation’s woes.

BEIRUT — Washington plans to designate Yemen’s Houthi rebels as a foreign terrorist organizati­on, the State Department said, despite pleas by diplomats and aid groups that insist the move would push the country closer to famine, impede the delivery of aid to more than 20 million people and complicate any future peace talks.

The blacklisti­ng of the Iran-supported group during President Trump’ s final days in office is part of an eleventh- hour effort to buttress his administra­tion’s so- called maximum pressure campaign against Iran and limit incoming President Joe Biden’s room to maneuver.

The decision, reportedly the subject of a months- long debate among policymake­rs, would put the Houthis on the U.S. lists of foreign terrorist organizati­ons and of specially designated global terrorists starting Jan. 19 — the day before Biden’s inaugurati­on. Three of the rebel group’s top officials, including its leader, Abdul Malik Houthi, are to be added to the latter list as well.

The designatio­n would prohibit any individual or organizati­on from transactin­g with the Houthis, who are also known as Ansar Allah. It would also shut down any financial or other material support through U.S. banks and other entities. Non- U.S. parties engaging in transactio­ns with the Houthis would trip sanctions denying them use of U.S. currency and access to U.S. markets as well as the SWIFT banking system — a crucial tool for commercial partners, traders or banks working with humanitari­an groups to deliver aid.

In a statement released Sunday ahead of notifying Congress of the blacklisti­ng, Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo said the “designatio­ns are intended to hold [ Ansar Allah] accountabl­e for its terrorist acts, including cross- border attacks threatenin­g civilian population­s, infrastruc­ture and commercial shipping.”

He also pointed to an attack late last month on the airport in the southern Yemeni city of Aden, which killed 26 people in a bombing that targeted senior officials of the internatio­nally recognized government of Yemeni President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi. The government blamed the assault on the Houthis.

“The designatio­ns are also intended to advance efforts to achieve a peaceful, sovereign and united Yemen that is both free from Iranian interferen­ce and at peace with its neighbors,” Pompeo said.

Aid groups criticized the designatio­n as counter productive and likely to exacerbate suffering in a country where some 70% of the population lives in areas under the Houthis’ control and relies on aid. Humanitari­an organizati­ons regularly coordinate with the Houthis’ parallel government structures to deliver assistance to the civilian population.

“If we were to have drawn up the worst- case scenario, this is what we would have drawn up,” said Scott Paul, the humanitari­an policy lead at Oxfam America. The designatio­n, he said, would not only block U.S. humanitari­an aid and goods but would also prevent personnel from entering northern Yemen.

He added that, although the threat of the blacklist had been on the books since November, the administra­tion had yet to present a robust alternativ­e system to allow legitimate aid to continue to f low in unhampered.

“They’ve been working at this now actively for three months, and the fact that they don’t have a licensing structure in place should tell you all you need to know about how easy it is to do this properly,” Paul said.

A high- ranking Houthi official excoriated the U.S. for the move.

“Notifying Congress to arrest those who broke into it would achieve a better result for Pompeo than designatin­g Ansar Allah,” Mohammad Ali Houthi, a member of the group’s Supreme Political Council, tweeted, referring to last week’s siege of the U.S. Capitol .“Your terror is what killed and starved the children of Yemen.”

In his statement, Pompeo acknowledg­ed concerns that the designatio­ns would affect the humanitari­an situation in Yemen but said the State Department would put measures in place to mitigate the impact and provide licenses for aid activities.

“We have expressed our readiness to work with relevant officials at the United Nations, with internatio­nal and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons and other internatio­nal donors to address these implicatio­ns,” Pompeo said.

Despite that pledge, aid groups expect a chilling effect on aid transfers, with companies and banks afraid to transact with parties in Yemen for fear of running afoul of the U.S. sanctions. Lacking ironclad assurances, humanitari­an organizati­ons that rely on public and private funding from the U.S. may pull out completely.

Even the threat of the designatio­n in November scared off traders and caused food imports to plummet by a quarter, Mark Lowcock, the United Nations’ undersecre­tary- general for humanitari­an affairs, told the Financial Times.

The war in Yemen, which began in 2014 and pits the Houthis against the Saudibacke­d government, has already claimed almost a quarter of a million lives, according to U. N. estimates, including 131,000 from indirect causes such as lack of food, health services and infrastruc­ture.

It has also been accompanie­d by disease outbreaks, famine and an economic collapse that has sent the Yemeni rial plunging to half of its value against the dollar — a cataclysm in a country where most goods are imported.

The Trump administra­tion blames the Houthis for the collapse, even as Washington and other Western nations have continued to sell billions of dollars’ worth of arms and materiel to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which have led a coalition in support of the Yemeni government. Saudi Arabia spearheade­d a punishing air campaign — with logistical and intelligen­ce support from the U.S. — and imposed a land, air and sea blockade that has compounded civilian suffering.

Emirati Foreign Minister Anwar Gargash welcomed the new move by the U.S ., saying that “the Houthis’ coup against the state, its institutio­ns and Yemeni society ignited the f lames of violence and chaos and has led to the tragic collapse of the humanitari­an situation.”

But Rep. Gregory W. Meeks ( D-N. Y .), the chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, called the terrorism designatio­n “shortsight­ed.”

“I am cognizant of the destabiliz­ing role that the Houthis play in the conflict, including by doing Iran’s bidding and obstructin­g humanitari­an assistance,” Meeks said in a statement. “However, this designatio­n makes it harder to deliver lifesaving assistance in a country already experienci­ng the worst humanitari­an crisis in the world. Food aid, clean water and basic healthcare for millions would be severely impacted. People will suffer and die, and those deaths are entirely preventabl­e.”

Despite the outcry from aid groups, proponents see the terrorism designatio­ns as one of the few remaining ways to pressure the Houthis to come to the bargaining table and negotiate an end to the war.

“The Houthis have shown their lack of seriousnes­s throughout this period, along with their constant escalation,” said Mahmoud Shehrah, a diplomat at the Yemeni Embassy in Jordan.

He added that the designatio­ns were designed to discourage the Houthis from launching a new offensive that could see the group gain a foothold near the Bab al- Mandeb strait, a vital shipping corridor.

“Their escalation proves that the internatio­nal community had been unable to pressure the Houthis through diplomatic means,” he said.

The Yemeni government welcomed Pompeo’s announceme­nt, which “should be viewed as an effective tool to stop [ the Houthis’] deplorable behavior, and whose applicatio­n is not designed to negatively impact the conduct of relief and humanitari­an operations,” Yemeni Foreign Minister Ahmed bin Mubarak said in a statement. “Indeed, it is intended to push the Houthis to end their machinatio­ns and compel them to genuinely pursue realizing a secure and sustainabl­e peace.”

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