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From: Shaher Abdulhak
To: jeffrey epstein usa <jeevacation@gmail.com>,
Subject: The Photos the U.S. and Saudi Arabia Don't Want You to See - The New York Times
Date: Fri, 01 Sep 2017 23:28:45 +0000
The Photos the U.S. and Saudi Arabia
Don't Want You to See
By Nicholas Kristof AUG. 29, 2017
A malnourished boy, with his mother, receives nutrition through a tube at a hospital in
Al Hudaydah, Yemen. Marco Frattini/World Food Program
A malnourished boy, with his mother, receives nutrition through a tube at a hospital in
Al Hudaydah, Yemen. Marco Frattini/World Food Program
A Yemeni soldier on the rubble of a house in Sana, the capital, hit by an airstrike that
killed 14 people. Mohammed Huwais/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
That's a young Yemeni boy, acutely malnourished like two million other children in
Yemen — caught up in what the United Nations calls the "world's largest humanitarian
crisis."
Their suffering is largely a result of monstrous misconduct by a Saudi-led coalition that
is supported by the United States and Britain.
Let's be blunt: With U.S. and U.K.
complicity, the Saudi government is
committing war crimes in Yemen.
"The country is on the brink of famine, with over 60 percent of the population not
knowing where their next meal will come from," the leaders of the U.N. World Food
Program, Unicef and the World Health Organization said in an unusual joint statement.
Yemen, always an impoverished country, has been upended for two years by fighting
between the Saudi-backed military coalition and Houthi rebels and their allies (with
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limited support from Iran). The Saudis regularly bomb civilians and, worse, they have
closed the airspace and imposed a blockade to starve the rebel-held areas into
submission.
That means that ordinary Yemenis, including children, die in bombings or starve.
A child dies in Yemen every 5 minutes
YEMEN-SECURITY AIRSTRIICE.2.jpg
Buthaina is the only member of her family not killed in a Saudi-led airstrike last week.
Khaled Abdullah/Reuters
This is Buthaina, a girl believed to be 4 or 5 who was the only survivor in her family of
a bombing last week by the Saudi coalition that killed 14 people.
Saudi Arabian imports of major arms by supplier, 2012-2016
*Includes Spain, France, Switzerland, Canada, Germany, Turkey, Sweden, Italy, the
Netherlands, Belgium, Finland, China, South Africa, Georgia, Austria, Slovakia, and
Bulgaria
Source: Sipri Arms Transfers Database
Human Rights Watch has repeatedly concluded that many Saudi airstrikes were
probable war crimes and that the U.S. shares responsibility because it provides the
Saudis with air-to-air refueling and intelligence used for airstrikes, as well as with
much of the weaponry.
Yet victims like Buthaina aren't on our television screens and rarely make the news
pages, in part because Saudi Arabia is successfully blocking foreign journalists from
the rebel-held areas. I know, because I've been trying for almost a year to get there and
thought I had arranged a visit for this week — and then Saudi Arabia shut me down.
With commercial flights banned, the way into rebel areas is on charter flights arranged
by the United Nations and aid groups. But Saudi military jets control this airspace and
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ban any flight if there's a journalist onboard. I don't think the Saudis would actually
shoot down a plane just because I was on it, but the U.N. isn't taking chances.
This is maddening: Saudi Arabia successfully blackmails the United Nations to bar
journalists so as to prevent coverage of Saudi atrocities.
2 in 3 Yemenis don't know where their next meal is coming from
2 alaabw.jpg
Alaa, two days before dying. Marco Frattini/World Food Program
The Saudis don't want you to see children like this one, Alaa, severely malnourished
and photographed by a World Food Program team. Two days later, Alaa died.
"The situation in Yemen is a disgrace that brings shame to our global community," says
Michelle Nunn, president of Care USA. "More than 20 million Yemenis are in need of
emergency assistance, and a child dies every five minutes. Yet few Americans know
about the daily bloodshed, near-famine conditions and a raging cholera epidemic."
We should cut off military
transfers to Saudi Arabia until it
ends its strangulation of Yemen.
The civil war in Yemen started as a local conflict, but Saudi Arabia rushed in because
of exaggerated fears of Iranian influence there. All parties have behaved outrageously.
But it's our side that appears to be responsible for the most deaths: A draft U.N. report
atys that the Saudi-led coalition is responsible for 65 percent more deaths of children
than the Houthis and their allies, and it's the Saudis who have imposed the blockade
that is leading to starvation.
In addition, the world's worst cholera epidemic has broken out in Yemen, partly
because so many people are malnourished. An additional 5,000 Yemenis are infected
with cholera each day.
5,000 Yemenis are infected with Cholera each day
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2 AFP_PA30T-copy.jpg
Yemeni children suspected of being infected with cholera received treatment at a
makeshift hospital in Sana in June 5. Mohammed Huwais/Agence France-Presse —
Getty Images
The Saudis say, correctly, that they are also providing large amounts of aid to Yemen.
But bombing and starving civilians is not excused if one provides Band-Aids
afterward.
2 AFP_RU9N4-copyjpg
A Yemeni child with a poster of a family killed in an airstrike on a residential area last
week in Sana. Mohammed Huwais/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
This catastrophe started under President Barack Obama, although he tried — not nearly
enough — to rein in Saudi Arabia. President Trump has removed the reins and
embraced the rash and inexperienced Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman,
who is overseeing the assault on Yemen.
"Yemen is a moral, humanitarian and strategic disaster for America," says Aaron David
Miller, a former State Department Middle East analyst who advised both Republican
and Democratic administrations. "U.S. policy is being driven by its pro-Saudi
proclivities and its own desire to contain Iran. But by enabling Riyadh, it's only making
an already fraught situation worse."
What do we do?
Jan Egeland, a former senior U.N. official who now leads the Norwegian Refugee
Council, urges an immediate cease-fire, a lifting of the embargo on Yemen, and peace
talks led by the U.N., the U.S. and the U.K., forcing both sides to compromise.
A glimpse of moral leadership has come from the U.S. Senate. A remarkable 47
senators in June voted to block a major arms sale to Saudi Arabia, largely because of
qualms about Saudi conduct in Yemen. Those senators are right, and we should halt all
arms transfers to Saudi Arabia until it ends the blockade and bombings.
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We Americans have sometimes wondered how Russia can possibly be so Machiavellian
as to support its Syrian government allies as they bomb and starve civilians. Yet we're
doing the same thing with Saudi Arabia, and it's just as unconscionable when we're the
ones complicit in war crimes.
Produced by: Jessia Ma
Sent from my iPhone
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| Filename | EFTA00664926.pdf |
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| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 7,247 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T23:24:03.878471 |