The Guardian (USA)

US has not fully investigat­ed own role in Yemen rights abuses, watchdog finds

- Stephanie Kirchgaess­ner in Washington

The US government has not fully investigat­ed its own role in perpetuati­ng human rights abuses in Yemen, according to a congressio­nal watchdog report that offered a damning assessment of both the Trump and Biden administra­tions’ commitment to tracking violations of humanitari­an law.

A report by the Government Accountabi­lity Office, which examined US weapons sales to the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, also raised serious doubts about one of Joe Biden’s first foreign policy as president, when he announced that his administra­tion was ending US support for Saudi offensive operations in Yemen.

At the time, in February 2021, the move was seen as an attempt to show the world that the US would no longer be an unquestion­ing ally to its allies in the Gulf.

But the GAO found that the Biden administra­tion’s move to classify weapons as offensive or defensive was largely meaningles­s. When asked by the GAO how they had distinguis­hed between equipment used for defensive purposes and offensive purposes, state department officials “could not provide a definition for equipment that is defensive in nature”.

The GAO report added: “State officials said they consider the threats posed to Saudi Arabia’s borders and infrastruc­ture when deciding which weapons are ‘offensive’ and which are ‘defensive’.”

A spokespers­on for the White House national security council did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

The report’s examinatio­n of nearly $60bn in US weapons sales to the Saudi-led coalition – from a period spanning 2015 to 2021 – is the second time a watchdog has attempted to investigat­e the US’s own culpabilit­y in contributi­ng to violation of humanitari­an laws in the Yemen conflict. In August 2020, a state department inspector general found that the department was failing to take measures to reduce civilian deaths.

The GAO found that both the state department and the Department of Defense had made “some efforts” to understand civilian harm and the use of US-origin weapons in Yemen. But it also found no evidence that the state department had ever investigat­ed any allegation­s that US equipment trans

ferred to Saudi Arabia and the UAE had ever been used for unauthoris­ed purposes or against anything other than “legitimate targets”.

The troubling findings come days after the White House confirmed that Biden will visit Riyadh next month, in what is widely seen as an effort to persuade the kingdom to increase oil output and ease price pressure for consumers.

Human rights advocates who have supported Biden’s decision – so far – to try to personally alienate Saudi’s de facto leader, Mohammed bin Salman, have called the visit a “betrayal” of Biden campaign promise to turn Saudi into a pariah.

The UN has called the Saudi-led war in Yemen one of the world’s worst humanitari­an crises, affecting an estimated 21 million people.

The GAO reported that the US DoD had made some efforts to train Saudi officials to mitigate civilian casualties and adhere to internatio­nal humanitari­an law. But the DoD has never “fully measured” the extent to which its advising and training has helped to facilitate “civilian harm reduction” in Yemen.

The GAO also said that it had been told by the state department that officials there could not locate three socalled “country team” assessment­s to the UAE, which would have included critical informatio­n and how the US has evaluated weapons sales requests. The report said that, according to DoD policy, the assessment­s must also include the “potential for misuse of the defense articles in question” and what “additional training or support, if any, is necessary to reduce the risk that the recipient will inadverten­tly cause civilian harm during operations”.

GAO requested the assessment­s in September and were told this month that they have been located and would be provided to GAO once clearance was obtained.

 ?? Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA ?? The GAO report raised doubts about Biden’s commitment to tracking violations of humanitari­an law in Yemen.
Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA The GAO report raised doubts about Biden’s commitment to tracking violations of humanitari­an law in Yemen.

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