US reaffirms Saudi ‘defence partnership’ in face of Huthi attacks

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RIYADH, Feb 19, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Washington has reaffirmed its “strategic
defence partnership” with Riyadh in the face of increased attacks by Yemeni
rebels but the move came in a call from the Pentagon not the White House.

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin condemned the Huthi attacks in a
telephone conversation Thursday with his Saudi counterpart, Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman, the official Saudi Press Agency and a Pentagon statement
said.

The conversation came after the White House announced on Tuesday that
President Joe Biden’s first telephone call to Saudi leaders would be to King
Salman, and not his son, the crown prince, who is the kingdom’s de facto
leader but has a tarnished reputation within Biden’s Democratic Party.

Austin spoke with Prince Mohammed “to reaffirm the strategic defence
partnership between the United States and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia”, the
Pentagon statement said.

“The secretary condemned the recent Huthi cross-border attacks on Saudi
Arabia and expressed his commitment to assisting Saudi Arabia in the defence
of its borders.”

The Huthi rebels have stepped up cross-border drone and missile attacks in
recent weeks as they resumed an offensive to seize the Saudi-backed
government’s last major toehold in northern Yemen.

Although Biden has reached out to US allies in every corner of the world,
he has yet to speak with Saudi leaders.

Two weeks after he was sworn in as president, Biden announced an end to US
backing for Saudi offensive operations in Yemen’s longstanding war, which he
said had created a “humanitarian and strategic catastrophe.”

“Secretary Austin reiterated recent changes in US policy toward the Saudi-
led coalition in Yemen, discussed the importance of ending the war,” the
Pentagon statement said.

Washington has also dropped the Huthi rebels from the US blacklist of
terrorist organisations.

Their backlisting in the dying days of the Trump administration was sharply
criticised by relief organisations, who said it would seriously hinder aid
shipments to the large swathes of Yemen controlled by the Huthis.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken already spoke earlier this month with
his Saudi counterpart Faisal bin Farhan, and raised the issue of human rights
in the kingdom.

Yemen has been embroiled in a bloody power struggle since 2014 between its
Saudi-backed government and Huthi rebels, who control the capital Sanaa and
most of the north.

The grinding conflict has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced
millions more, triggering what the United Nations describes as the world’s
worst humanitarian crisis.