The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on the Yemen war: US needs deeds, not just words, to make peace

- Editorial

“This war has to end.” These words by President Joe Biden about the terrible conflict in Yemen are welcome. But they are easier to say than to make happen. Since 2015, fighting in Yemen has left a quarter of a million people dead and 3 million displaced. War crimes were committed on all sides, while the world looked on as a humanitari­an disaster unfolded. The country is currently a battlegrou­nd between regional actors and their proxies that vie for supremacy among the sandy ruins of some of the oldest civilisati­ons on Earth.

Mr Biden has promised to end arms sales and US participat­ion in the Saudi/United Arab Emirates-led war in Yemen. This is to be welcomed. It is also what Democrats in Congress have voted for. The US president should ensure that any embargo cannot be circumvent­ed. Britain, shamefully, has yet to follow suit with a ban. Mr Biden has also lifted the terrorist designatio­n of the Houthis, the Iranianbac­ked group whose advance was the reason Riyadh and Abu Dhabi invaded. This too is good news. One can only make peace with one’s enemies. If diplomacy is back, as the US president claims, then diplomats need to be able to talk to foes as well as friends.

Probably out of the loop for some time will be Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown prince, whom US intelligen­ce holds complicit in the gruesome murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi. He, along with the UAE’s Mohammed bin Zayed, conceived the war, played the west off against Moscow to secure UN cover for the carnage and then occupied strategica­lly important pieces of Yemeni real estate. Boris Johnson, who courted the Saudi royal during the Trump years, will need to move quickly if Britain, without strategic allies in Europe after Brexit, is to play a constructi­ve role in its former colony. This cannot be lightly

dismissed as a pang of regret: Mr Johnson’s diplomats at the UN are “pen holders” in the security council, in charge of drafting resolution­s on Yemen.

The Houthis’ new offensive in Marib and their drone attacks into Saudi Arabia underline just how badly Riyadh and Abu Dhabi underestim­ated the group’s strength. Mr Biden’s team should put things right because, whether they like it or not, as part of the Obama administra­tion they provided military, logistical and diplomatic cover for the Saudi/UAE-led campaign. It has been alleged that US mercenarie­s were hired by the UAE in 2015 to assassinat­e political rivals. In dealing with Yemen, US diplomats will face a familiar problem: how to placate Gulf allies peeved by Washington’s attempts to secure Iranian cooperatio­n over its nuclear programme.

The west’s interest must be now to stabilise Yemen and put in place a durable political process. The UN says Yemen faces the worst famine the world has seen for decades unless donors can find $3.85bn (£2.8bn) next week. Rich nations need to step up: Oxfam says current pledges fall short of the country’s growing need. Left unattended, the fires will burn in Yemen, scattering refugees and spreading chaos. Mr Biden should promote a new security council resolution to replace the current one that unrealisti­cally envisages the Houthis surrenderi­ng to a transition­al government that operates out of a Saudi hotel. Foreign forces ought to leave. What is required is a negotiated process that includes homegrown voices from every side of the conflict – including Houthis, southern separatist­s and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d. Yemen’s diverse communitie­s have traditiona­lly been able to compromise. Mr Biden cannot solve Yemen’s problems. But he can, and he should, bring together Yemenis to do so.

 ??  ?? Yemeni children at a refugee camp on the outskirts of the northern city of Marib. ‘Left unattended, the fires will burn in Yemen, scattering refugees and spreading chaos.’ Photograph: AFP/Getty
Yemeni children at a refugee camp on the outskirts of the northern city of Marib. ‘Left unattended, the fires will burn in Yemen, scattering refugees and spreading chaos.’ Photograph: AFP/Getty

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