Mattis admits US running Yemen war
US involved in ‘battlefield management’ of Saudi war against Yemen: Mattis
…from Press TV, Tehran
[ Editor’s Note:
General Mattis effectively confirms that VT was right again. The US is
effectively a mercenary force hired by the Saudis. The Saudis “pay” the
US to run its battles and wars for it, in return for bankrolling a huge stockpile of US weaponry where Saudi “soldiers” are effectively actors playing a role.
Earlier in the week there was a test leaking of this, that the US running of the Saudi air campaign against Yemen was “saving lives”, because the US could to it more competently than the slack Saudis.
But
that just admitted to the world that. despite the huge technical
military advantage over Yemen. the US must then be responsible for most
of the civilian deaths and the war crime of destroying Yemen’s
infrastructure to cause the cholera that has killed so many children.
As an anonymous person once said, “You just can’t make this stuff up!”… Jim W. Dean ]Jim's Editor’s Notes are solely crowdfunded via PayPal Jim's work includes research, field trips, Heritage TV Legacy archiving & more. Thanks for helping. Click to donate >> |
– First published … March 29, 2018 –
US Defense Secretary James Mattis has acknowledged that
Washington has been involved in managing Saudi Arabia’s brutal
airstrikes in Yemen.Speaking to reporters at the Pentagon on Tuesday, Mattis said the US military is “doing the planning” of Saudi Arabia’s military campaign against Yemen.
“So this is a very dynamic sort of battlefield management,” he said.
Mattis also admitted that the US has been involved in mid-air
refueling of Saudi warplanes, claiming that the operation could help
minimize civilian casualties in the war-torn country.The Pentagon chief’s comments contradict long-standing claims of a very limited, non-combat engagement in the Saudi war on Yemen. The US has previously said that it provides intelligence and logistical support.
The White House also claims that its involvement has nothing to do with the civilian death toll in the Arab country.
Saudi Arabia has been incessantly pounding Yemen since March 2015 in an attempt to crush the popular Houthi Ansarullah movement and reinstate former president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, who is a staunch ally of the Riyadh regime.
The conflict has killed about 14,000 people in Yemen, displaced more than 2 million and driven the country to the verge of widespread famine. Much of the Arabian Peninsula country’s infrastructure, including hospitals, schools and factories, has been reduced to rubble due to the war.
Earlier this month, the US Congress voted against a resolution that sought to end America’s support for the war.
Last week, the administration of US President Donald Trump approved weapons sales to Saudi Arabia totaling more than $1 billion, despite growing pressure from rights groups to halt arms deals between the West and Riyadh.
Amnesty International has slammed the United States, Britain and France for their continued arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The UK-based rights group said the arms sales have been an “enormous harm to Yemeni civilians” over the course of the war.
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