Imagine working
for Lockheed Martin designing a bomb. Of course, you love your children
and want to give them the best your paycheck can do, The bomb has been
shipped to the Middle East, and you are proud as a peacock. You helped
develop a bomb that will really kill lots of people, including many
children. Does this in any way bother you? Or is this just another
job and another bomb must be built. Bombs kill, but you are making profit
for Lockheed Martin. Forget about the consequences. So what if some
children get killed because of your work.
Thursday, March 28, 2019
‘Every
War Is a War Against Children’
We, in the United States, have yet to realize both the futility
and immense consequences of war even as we develop, store, sell, and use
hideous weapons. The number of children killed is rising.
At
9:30 in the morning of March 26, the start of
the fifth year of the Saudi-led coalition war against Yemen, the
entrance to a rural hospital in the northwest part of the country was
teeming as patients waited to be seen and employees arrived at work. Suddenly,
missiles from an airstrike hit the hospital, killing seven people, four of them
children.
Jason
Lee of Save the Children, told The New York Times that
the Saudi-led
coalition, now in its fifth year of waging war in Yemen, knew the
coordinates of the hospital and should have been able to avoid the strike. He
called what happened “a gross violation of humanitarian law.”
The
day before, Save the Children reported that
air raids carried out by the Saudi-led coalition have killed at least 226
Yemeni children and injured 217 more in just the last twelve months. “Of these
children,” the report noted, “210 were inside or close to a house when their
lives were torn apart by bombs that had been sold to the coalition by foreign
governments.”
Last
year, an analysis issued by Save the Children estimated that
85,000 children under age five have likely died from starvation or disease
since the Saudi-led coalition’s 2015 escalation of the war in Yemen.
“Children
who die in this way suffer immensely as their vital organ functions slow down
and eventually stop,” said Tamer
Kirolos, Save the Children’s Country Director in Yemen. “Their immune systems
are so weak they are more prone to infections with some too frail to even cry.
Parents are having to witness their children wasting away, unable to do
anything about it.” Kirolos and others who have continuously reported on the
war in Yemen believe these deaths are entirely preventable. They are demanding
an immediate suspension of arms sales to all warring parties, an end to
blockades preventing distribution of food, fuel and humanitarian aid and the
application of full diplomatic pressure to end the war.
The
United States, a major supporter of the Saudi-led coalition, has itself been
guilty of killing innocent patients and hospital workers by bombing a hospital.
On October 3, 2015, U.S. airstrikes destroyed a Médecins
Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan,
killing forty-two people. “Patients burned in their beds,” MSF reported,
“medical staff were decapitated and lost limbs, and others were shot from the
air while they fled the burning building.”
"The United States, a major
supporter of the Saudi-led coalition, has itself been guilty of killing
innocent patients and hospital workers by bombing a hospital."
More
recently, on March 23, 2019, eight children were among fourteen Afghan
civilians killed by
a U.S. airstrike also near Kunduz.
Atrocities
of war accumulate, horrifically. We in the United States have yet to realize
both the futility and immense consequences of war. We continue to develop,
store, sell, and use hideous weapons. We rob ourselves and others of resources
needed to meet human needs, including grappling with the terrifying realities
of climate change.
We
should heed the words and actions of Eglantyne Jebb, who founded Save
the Children a century ago. Responding to the British post-war blockade of
Germany and Eastern Europe, Jebb participated in a group attempting to deliver
food and medical supplies to children who were starving.
In
London’s Trafalgar Square, she distributed a leaflet showing the emaciated
children and declaring: “Our blockade has caused this, - millions of children
are starving to death.” She was arrested, tried, convicted, and fined. But the
judge in the case was moved by her commitment to children and paid her fine.
His generosity was Save the Children’s first donation.
“Every
war,” said Jebb, “is a war against children.”
© 2019 The Progressive
Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence.
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