Worried About “Stigmatizing” Cluster Bombs, House Approves More Sales to Saudi Arabia
17
June, 2016
THE
HOUSE ON THURSDAY narrowly
defeated a measure that would have banned the transfer of cluster
bombs to Saudi Arabia, but the closeness of the vote was an
indication of growing congressional opposition to the conduct of the
U.S.-backed, Saudi-led bombing coalition in Yemen.
The
vote was mostly along party lines, with 200 Republicans – and only
16 Democrats – heeding the Obama administration’s urging to vote
against the measure. The vote was 204-216.
“The
Department of Defense strongly opposes this amendment,” said Rep.
Rodney Frelinghuysen, R-N.J., chairman of the House Committee on
Defense Appropriations, during floor debate. “They advise us that
it would stigmatize cluster munitions, which are legitimate weapons
with clear military utility.”
Cluster
munitions are large shell casings that scatter hundreds or thousands
of miniature explosives over large areas – often the size of
several football fields. Some of the bomblets fail to explode on
impact, leaving mine-like explosives that kill
civilians and destroy
farmland decades
after a conflict ends.
Cluster
bombs are banned by an international
treaty signed
by 119 countries, not including the United States. The United States
opposed the treaty, and instead of signing it, adopted a policy that
cluster bombs should never be used in concentrated, civilian areas.
Speaking
in support of the amendment, Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., said Saudi
Arabia has deliberately targeted civilians with cluster bombs.
“Earlier this year, the Saudi-led coalition dropped cluster bombs
in Yemen’s capital of Sanaa, specifically targeting known civilian
neighborhoods,” he said. “One of the buildings hit was the al
Noor Center for Care and Rehabilitation for the Blind, which also has
a school
for blind children.
The destruction of the school and the injuries sustained by the
children was unbearably gruesome.”
The
vote came the day after one of the war’s key
architects,
Mohammed Bin Salman, the Saudi deputy crown prince and defense
minister, met
with lawmakers to discuss,
among other things, “the threat posed by Iranian aggression in …
Yemen, and the broader Middle East.”
Despite
the defeat, human rights activists celebrated the closeness of the
vote. “This is a big deal for the U.S.-Saudi Arabia alliance,”
said Sunjeev Bery, Amnesty International’s advocacy director for
the Middle East in the U.S. “More and more members of Congress are
clearly getting tired of selling Saudi Arabia bombs when it is
dropping them on civilians in Yemen.”
The
vote comes at a time when the U.S.-Saudi alliance is facing
unprecedented skepticism in the United States. Although the Obama
administration has refused to publicly
condemn the
use of cluster bombs,Foreign
Policy reported that
the White House has quietly placed a hold on a transfer of CBU-105
cluster bombs. A bipartisan group of
lawmakers is trying to place a complete arms embargo on the kingdom,
until it stops deliberately targeting civilians in Yemen.
The
Saudis faced further loss of support Thursday when Sheikh Mohammed
bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the deputy crown prince of the UAE, announced
onTwitter that
the “war is over” for Emirati troops. The UAE had previously been
one of the most active members of the coalition.
Obama Gets Congress to Back Selling Cluster Bombs to Saudi ‘ChildKillers’
Despite
concerns of human rights violations conducted by Riyahd in Yemen, the
United States has decided to give the Kingdom weapons that
disproportionately threaten children.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.