US Mobilizing Int’l Pressure on Houthis, Won’t Tie Yemen Crisis to Iran Negotiations
US State Department Arabic language Spokesperson Geraldine Griffith said Washington was amassing international support against the Iran-backed Houthi militias to make them end their violations in Yemen and return to the political negotiations table.
She stressed that ending the Yemen
crisis was one of the priorities of the American administration that has taken
the initiative to play this role for the sake of the Yemeni people.
It is working in garnering international
support to pressure the Houthis to reach a ceasefire and comply with
international calls to that end, she added in remarks to Al Arabiya television.
Moreover, she stated that the
situation in Yemen will not be connected to the ongoing negotiations with Iran
in Vienna aimed at returning to the 2015 nuclear deal, which the Trump
administration quit in 2018.
She stressed that US envoy to
Yemen, Tim Lenderking, is focusing his efforts on bolstering the international
community’s ability to impose more pressure on the Houthis.
Griffith vowed that her country
will not lift sanctions off Iran until it ceases its destabilizing behavior in
the region.
Meanwhile, US Secretary of State
Antony Blunken said “an inclusive and lasting resolution” of the Yemen conflict
is a “top priority” for the United States.
“I look forward to the continued engagement
between our countries and other partners to achieve peace, and I affirm our
commitment to helping bring about a prosperous future for all Yemenis,” he
stressed in a statement on Yemen National Day.
The United States appreciates the
Republic of Yemen Government’s ongoing commitments towards achieving peace in
Yemen, he added.
The State Department had tweeted
that Lenderking met in New York last week with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince
Faisal bin Farhan to discuss easing the humanitarian crisis and ending the
conflict in Yemen. The meeting was attended by Daniel Benaim, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for Arabian Peninsula Affairs in the Near East Bureau at the
State Department.
Blinken had last week accused the
Houthis of benefiting from “generous military support” from the Iranian
government to launch attacks against civilian population centers and commercial
infrastructure in Yemen, aggravating the conditions, which are already known as
“the world’s worst current humanitarian disasters.”
In a press statement on Thursday,
he encouraged accountability for Houthis’ actions, “which perpetuate conflict
in Yemen and undermine peace efforts, including the brutal and costly offensive
targeting Marib.”
He noted that the Treasury
Department’s designation of two Houthi leaders on the sanctions list came
following an unprecedented consensus between the international community and
regional actors on the need for an immediate ceasefire and the resumption of
peace talks.
“The Houthis benefit from generous military
support from the Iranian government to wage attacks against civilian population
centers and commercial shipping infrastructure in Yemen, exacerbating
conditions in what the United Nations calls one of the world’s worst current
humanitarian disasters,” he added.
In another press conference, Lenderking said: “If there were no offensive, if there were a commitment to peace, if the parties are all showing up to deal constructively with the UN envoy, there would be no need for designations.”