The Saudi Blockade of Yemen: Frequently Asked Questions

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What is the blockade’s role in Yemen’s humanitarian crisis?

For more than six years, Saudi Arabia has imposed an air and sea blockade on Yemen that has restricted the flow of vital commercial and humanitarian goods into the country. These restrictions have been a leading driver of the humanitarian crisis in Yemen, where 400,000 children are at risk of dying of malnutrition this year as the country is pushed toward “the biggest famine in modern history.” Since January 2021, Saudi Arabia has severely restricted fuel imports, hindering food shipments and hospitals’ ability to function.

Isn’t the blockade needed to prevent Iranian weapons from reaching the Houthis?

No. In 2015, the United Nations established aninspection and verification mechanism that ensures that ships docking at Yemen’s ports are not carrying weapons. In April 2021, US Special Envoy Tim Lenderking acknowledged that the mechanism “works quite well.” The import restrictions imposed by Saudi Arabia and the Hadi government are a tactic of economic warfare that seeks to gain leverage over the Houthis through starvation and deprivation of civilian populations.

Does the United States provide support to Saudi Arabia that enables the blockade?

Yes. Although President Biden announced an end to U.S. support for the Saudi-led coalition’s offensive operations in Yemen in February 2021, the Department of Defenseacknowledged in April that the United States continues to provide maintenance support and transfer spare parts for Saudi aircraft. This support is essentialfor Saudi Arabia to be able to continue its offensive operations in Yemen, including enforcing the blockade.

It remains unclear what if any other forms of military support the United States continues to provide to the coalition, as the administration has so far refused to answer a set of detailed questions posed by 41 members of Congress in a February letter seeking clarity on US involvement in the war.

What has the Biden administration said about the blockade?

In its first several months, the Biden administration has said nothing publicly about the blockade, even as the UN sounded the alarm over the impact of Saudi Arabia’s tightening restrictions on fuel imports. When pressed by reporters, a State Department spokesman claimed that “food and commodities are getting through, so it is not a blockade.” However, in response to mounting pressure from Congress, the media, humanitarian groups, and civil society for Biden to call on Saudi Arabia to lift the blockade on Yemen, Lenderking said that commodities and humanitarian assistance must be allowed to enter into Yemen unimpeded and that “Saudi Arabia must not stand in the way.”

When asked by Rep. Ted Lieu (CA-33) what if any leverage the administration is prepared to use to compel Saudi Arabia to lift its restrictions, Lenderkingcould not say. And though Lenderking testified that restrictions on commodities into Yemen’s ports should be taken “off the table” as a bargaining chip and “should not be a factor in political discussions,” the administration endorsed a Saudi ceasefire offer in March that explicitly sought to use the blockade as leverage to elicit Houthi concessions.

Who has spoken out about the blockade?

UN World Food Program director David Beasley has repeatedly spoken about the urgent need to lift the blockade. In April, Beasley flew to Washington and reportedly “impressed upon lawmakers the urgency of lifting the blockade ‘immediately.’”

Following the briefing, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Gregory Meeks (NY-05) and a bipartisan group of members from the Middle East subcommittee sent a letter urging the administration to pressure Saudi Arabia to lift the blockade. 76 members of the House led by Rep. Debbie Dingell (MI-12) and 16 Senators led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (MA) have sent similar letters, as did a coalition of over 70 national advocacy organizations and more than a dozen celebrities.

What should Congress and the administration do to bring about an end to the blockade?

As a top policy priority, the Biden administration must use its vast leverage to compel Saudi Arabia to immediately and unconditionally lift the blockade. Members of Congress should continue to call on the administration to do so and should introduce and pass legislation to prohibit all forms of US support for the blockade and other offensive operations of the Saudi-UAE coalition in Yemen.

Bryan Bowman is the program assistant for Middle East policy. He is working to advance a more progressive US foreign policy based on restraint, diplomacy, and peace. Hassan El-Tayyab is FCNL’s lead lobbyist on Middle East policy. He is also responsible for representing FCNL with the various coalitions that work on these issues.

Founded in 1943 by members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), FCNL lobbies Congress and the administration for U.S. policies that advance peace, justice, and good government.

3 thoughts on “The Saudi Blockade of Yemen: Frequently Asked Questions”

  1. Apr 17, 2021 Humanitarian crisis in Yemen deepens

    The U.N. humanitarian chief is warning that the world’s biggest humanitarian crisis in Yemen is getting even worse with the COVID-19 pandemic “roaring back”. Press TV, 17 April 2021

    https://youtu.be/dM23GlPyIC0

    1. The US should switch sides and support Yemen in the war Saudi Arabia started there. People there are starving and have no access to vaccines including the ones for Covid-19. The US doesn’t live up to what it says about itself. It says it helps others during times of hardships and says it is the most humanitarian nation in the world.

      1. The truth is the U.S. has never lived up to it’s words. This is a very good article.

        November 14, 2020 US Has Killed More Than 20 Million People in 37 “Victim Nations” Since World War II

        First published in November 2015 GR Editor’s Note Let us put this in historical perspective: the commemoration of the War to End All Wars acknowledges that 15 million lives were lost in the course of World War I (1914-18).

        https://www.globalresearch.ca/us-has-killed-more-than-20-million-people-in-37-victim-nations-since-world-war-ii/5492051

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