Quote:
"This past Tuesday, President Barack Obama delivered his final speech to
the United Nations General Assembly in New York. Though he tried to
sound optimistic, he couldn’t help but strike a rueful tone. Gone was
the global media darling who electrified world leaders in 2009—that
Obama was “determined to act boldly and collectively on behalf of
justice and prosperity at home and abroad.” The graying, deliberate
Obama of 2016 could offer only limited aspirations of a “course
correction” in world politics, while pondering why cycles of conflict
and suffering persisted. Though the president advocated for the “hard
work of diplomacy” in places like Syria, he also elaborated on one of
his recent, common refrains, cautioning that in the Middle East “no
external power is going to be able to force different religious
communities or ethnic communities to co-exist for long.” Across the
region, “we have to insist that all parties recognize a common humanity
and that nations end proxy wars that fuel disorder,” Obama said.
A day later, the U.S. Senate held a rare debate on the sale of arms
destined for another war in the Middle East. The deal, for $1.15 billion
in weaponry to Saudi Arabia, including over 150 Abrams tanks, is a drop
in a bucket: more than $100 billion in arms sales to the kingdom have
already been approved by the Obama administration. But a year and a half
into the kingdom’s relentless war in Yemen, opponents of the new sale
see it as an outright affirmation of Washington’s involvement in a
deadly, strategically incoherent war that the White House has kept
largely quiet about. What’s more, it is at odds with Obama’s apparent
distaste for regional proxy wars."
_________
Quote:
"Farea al-Muslimi, a Beirut-based Yemeni political analyst and cofounder
of the Sanaa Center for Strategic Studies, said underwhelming diplomatic
efforts by the United States like this have left Yemenis feeling like a
beleaguered afterthought. “It is quite disappointing, especially
because Yemen is easily solved compared to Syria,” where a political
revolution morphed disastrously into sectarian cleansing, he said.
Yemen’s war, by contrast, is still largely a matter of local rivalries.
“But there is simply no interest or concern” from the United States,
al-Muslimi said."
Article:
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/09/yemen-saudi-arabia-obama-riyadh/501365/
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