Arab Times

US working hard to end Yemen crisis, says Kerry

UN warns of imminent infrastruc­ture collapse

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SANAA, May 2, (AFP): The United States said Saturday it was working to find a solution for Yemen’s crisis as the UN urged a truce, warning the country was on the verge of collapse.

More than six weeks of Saudi-led air strikes targeting Shiite rebels in Yemen and ground fighting has killed hundreds of people and forced hundreds of thou- sands to flee the impoverish­ed country.

US Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters in Sri Lanka it was not inevitable that Yemen would become a failed state, stressing however that Washington was working “very hard” to find a solution.

“I will not say yet that the verdict is in on what Yemen is going to be because we are trying very hard, working with the UN, working with our friends in the region,” he said.

“We are working hard to secure a negotiated process through the UN which will bring the parties together, Yemenites to negotiate the future of Yemen,” he said.

Kerry was speaking a day after the UN Security Council failed to back a Russian appeal for an immediate ceasefire or humanitari­an pauses in Yemen.

Diplomats said a draft statement submitted by Russia to a closed-door session of the 15-member council was not rejected out of hand on Friday, but that council members needed time to consider the wording.

“There was a strong degree of council agreement on the desperate humanitari­an situation in Yemen and need to return to political talks,” one diplomat said.

The Saudi-led coalition launched the air war on March 26 against Iran-backed Houthi rebels who overran much of the country, forcing President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi to flee to Riyadh.

Iran, which denies arming the insurgents, has denounced the campaign of daily air strikes.

WASHINGTON, May 2, (AFP): US warships protecting American-flagged ships in the Strait of Hormuz may extend assistance to other countries’ vessels, officials said Friday, after reports of Iranian forces harassing shipping.

The expanded US naval presence is intended to signal to Iran that Washington is ready to safeguard shipping along the vital corridor, even at a moment of delicate diplomacy with Tehran over its nuclear program, experts said.

American warships started “accompanyi­ng” US-flagged vessels in the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday in response to two incidents in less than a week in which commercial vessels were coerced or harassed by Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards.

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter approved the operation and “this is going to continue for an indefinite period of time,” Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren said.

US Central Command, which oversees forces in the Middle East, said it was possible the assistance could be offered to other merchant ships sailing through the maritime chokepoint, a crucial route for the world’s oil.

“Our current plans are for accompanyi­ng US-flagged ships, although there are discussion­s with other nations to include their vessels as well,” Central Command spokesman Colonel Patrick Ryder told reporters.

Officials did not say what other countries might take up the offer.

The USS Farragut, a guided-missile destroyer, and three coastal patrol craft — the Thunderbol­t, the Firebolt and the Typhoon — are operating in the area.

The high profile naval presence was a response to the seizure of a Marshall Islands-flagged container vessel the Maersk Tigris on Tuesday by Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards, who fired warning shots at the ship.

And last week, Pentagon officials said a US-flagged ship was “harassed” by Iranian patrol boats.

Iranian authoritie­s said the Maersk Tigris was confiscate­d over a commercial dispute. But analysts were skeptical of the explanatio­n and speculated it could be related to Tehran’s proxy war with America’s Gulf Arab allies in Yemen.

Whatever Tehran’s motive, said Alireza Nader, an author and analyst at the RAND Corporatio­n think tank “the US had to demonstrat­e that the waters of the strait are secure and open to internatio­nal shipping — whether Iran intended to send a message or not.”

The tension in the Gulf coincides with a diplomatic push by major powers for a deal to curtail Iran’s nuclear activities before a June 30 deadline. The prospect of an accord has alarmed Saudi Arabia and other pro-US allies in the Gulf.

“The rest of the Middle East, Saudi Arabia especially, is worried that if there is a nuclear deal and sanctions are eased on Iran, they (the Iranians) would act more aggressive­ly in the Persian Gulf and beyond,” Nader told AFP.

The stepped-up naval role in the Gulf is a way to show that the United States “is serious about guaranteei­ng security in the region despite the nuclear deal.”

In Washington, Republican lawmakers said Iran’s actions underline the need to closely review the terms of any nuclear deal.

The Strait of Hormuz is often described as the world’s most important oil export route. About 30 percent of all oil traded by sea moves through the narrow channel, or about 17 million barrels a day.

At its most narrow point, the strait is 21 miles (33 kilometers) wide, but the width of the navigable shipping lane in each direction is only two miles — separated by a two-mile buffer zone.

In such a crowded channel, US military strategist­s have long feared a miscalcula­tion could trigger a conflict that both gov- ernments would prefer to avoid. And this time, a potential diplomatic breakthrou­gh is at stake.

Over the past two decades, Iran has invested heavily in a fleet of speed boats and anti-ship mines that could counter America’s powerful naval forces in the Gulf. In 2011, Iran issued threats that it might close the strait in retaliatio­n for tougher internatio­nal sanctions, prompting a warning from Washington that US forces would be ready to take action to keep shipping lanes open.

In the current case, Iran’s rhetoric has been more restrained, and US officials say American warships are not poised to enter Iranian territoria­l waters.

“I don’t think we are necessaril­y on the verge of confrontat­ion,” Nader said.

 ?? (AP) ?? Kate, Duchess of Cambridge holds her newborn baby princess, as she poses for the media on the steps of The Lindo Wing of St Mary’s Hospital, London, on May 2. Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, gave birth to their second child, a baby girl on
Saturday...
(AP) Kate, Duchess of Cambridge holds her newborn baby princess, as she poses for the media on the steps of The Lindo Wing of St Mary’s Hospital, London, on May 2. Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, gave birth to their second child, a baby girl on Saturday...

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