Fears of new humanitarian crisis in Yemen after attack on port
Margaret Coker DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — An Arab military coalition invaded Yemen’s main Red Sea port Wednesday, threatening to worsen what is already the world’s most severe humanitarian disaster by disrupting the pipeline that millions of Yemenis rely on for food and other supplies.
The air and ground attack by forces loyal to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates and backed by the United States was aimed at tipping the balance in Yemen’s long-running civil war and driving Iranian-backed rebels out of the port of Hodeida. But sustained fighting there could produce one of the bloodiest urban battles of the war, deepening what is already a catastrophic humanitarian situation.
After years of war, 8 million of Yemen’s estimated 28 million people are at risk of starvation, according to the United Nations and aid agencies. About a quarter of a million people in Hodeida, a city of 600,000, are in danger of injury or death in an urban assault, they said.
But a battle there would have consequences far beyond the city, whose port is the main entry point for aid to the rest of the country.
“This attack risks more people dying, but it also risks cutting the lifeline of millions of Yemenis,” said Jolien Veldwijk, the acting country director in Yemen for the aid agency Care International. “Food imports already reached the lowest levels since the conflict started and the price of basic commodities has risen by a third. We are gravely concerned that parts of the population could experience famine.”
The Saudis and Emiratis intervened in the war three years ago with hopes of a quick victory over the Houthi rebels, an armed movement with ties to Iran. Instead, the two nations have been stuck in a quagmire.
With the assault on Hodeida, they were hoping for a symbolic victory over the group that would give the neighboring countries an upper hand in peace negotiations.
The Houthis still control the capital, Sanaa, as well as territories in northern Yemen, their ancestral lands.
“The liberation of the city and port will create a new reality and bring the Houthis to the negotiations,” Anwar Gargash, the Emirates’ state minister for foreign affairs, said on Twitter on Wednesday.
The United States has backed the Saudi-led coalition in this war but U.S. military officials, including Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, have warned their Arab allies that the assault could end in failure both militarily and politically, and result in further civilian suffering.
An increasing number of Republican and Democratic lawmakers in Congress are criticizing the U.S. role, accusing the Pentagon of being complicit in the bombing campaign.