The ongoing atrocity that is the war in Yemen finally got a bit of mild international attention with the haunting picture of a starving 5-month-old Yemeni baby, Udai Faisal, staring at the camera with an expression of mute horror, his papery skin stretched tight over jutting bones. He died a couple of days later.
But death by malnutrition and sickness, largely caused by Saudi Arabia's blockade, is only one of many ways the war is landing on Yemeni kids. According to Unicef, fighting has killed or maimed at least six children every day for the last year, and probably many more. Overall, some 8,100 people have died, tens of thousands have been injured, and 2.5 million displaced.
The war has now been waged for over a year, and the United States is deeply implicated through its support of Saudi Arabia. Yet a few exceptions aside (such as The American Conservative's Daniel Larison), there has been vanishingly little attention paid to the conflict in the U.S. media. America would be well advised to start using its influence to restore peace and end the Saudi blockade.
First, a bit of background. The Yemeni government has long had trouble with the group Ansar Allah, a Shia group based in the north of Yemen, also called the Houthis. The Arab Spring toppled the sitting president in 2011, after which the sitting vice-president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi (Sunni), was elected on a single-candidate ballot as an interim president. Long story short, the Houthis boycotted the election, the former president Ali Saleh (Shia) threw in with them, and a ceasefire broke down in early 2015, leading to open war. The Houthis took over the capital Sana'a, and attempted to take the southwest port city of Aden, the last remaining major bastion of the previous government.
Fearing a fully Shia-run state on their southern border and wanting to smash a proxy of Iran (which is also the most powerful Shia state), the Saudis jumped in on Hadi's side.