Empty Threats and Aid Weaponization: Understanding the International Response to Yemen’s Humanitarian Crisis

Q2 Arts and Humanities Journal of the Middle East and Africa Pub Date : 2023-07-03 DOI:10.1080/21520844.2023.2240220
Michael Makara
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Since 2015, international aid organizations have delivered over $23 billion in assistance to alleviate Yemen’s humanitarian crisis. Complicating this effort, however, is the fact that aid organizations must coordinate aid delivery with the Houthis, the de facto authority ruling 70 percent of Yemen’s population. Rather than allowing aid organizations to operate without interference, the Houthis have restricted their operations and weaponized aid for political purposes. This comes despite aid organizations’ threats to withhold assistance from the Houthis. Why do the Houthis continue to weaponize aid despite pressure and condemnation from the very organizations upon which they depend for assistance? I argue that the structure of humanitarian relief efforts makes it difficult for aid organizations to credibly threaten to cut off assistance to the Houthis, and that these empty threats do little to deter Houthi bad behavior. In developing this argument, this article contributes both to our understanding of the politics of Yemen’s civil war, as well as to theoretical conversations about the relationship between rebel groups and international actors.
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空洞的威胁和援助武器化:理解国际社会对也门人道主义危机的反应
摘要自2015年以来,国际援助组织为缓解也门的人道主义危机提供了超过230亿美元的援助。然而,使这一努力更加复杂的是,援助组织必须与胡塞人协调援助交付,胡塞人是统治也门70%人口的事实上的权威。胡塞人没有允许援助组织在不受干涉的情况下运作,而是限制了他们的行动,并将援助武器化用于政治目的。尽管援助组织威胁要停止向胡塞人提供援助,但这还是发生了。为什么胡塞人不顾他们所依赖的组织的压力和谴责,继续将援助武器化?我认为,人道主义救援工作的结构使援助组织很难可信地威胁切断对胡塞的援助,而这些空洞的威胁对阻止胡塞的不良行为几乎没有作用。在发展这一论点的过程中,这篇文章既有助于我们理解也门内战的政治,也有助于关于反叛组织与国际行为者之间关系的理论对话。
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来源期刊
Journal of the Middle East and Africa
Journal of the Middle East and Africa Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: The Journal of the Middle East and Africa, the flagship publication of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa (ASMEA), is the first peer-reviewed academic journal to include both the entire continent of Africa and the Middle East within its purview—exploring the historic social, economic, and political links between these two regions, as well as the modern challenges they face. Interdisciplinary in its nature, The Journal of the Middle East and Africa approaches the regions from the perspectives of Middle Eastern and African studies as well as anthropology, economics, history, international law, political science, religion, security studies, women''s studies, and other disciplines of the social sciences and humanities. It seeks to promote new research to understand better the past and chart more clearly the future of scholarship on the regions. The histories, cultures, and peoples of the Middle East and Africa long have shared important commonalities. The traces of these linkages in current events as well as contemporary scholarly and popular discourse reminds us of how these two geopolitical spaces historically have been—and remain—very much connected to each other and central to world history. Now more than ever, there is an acute need for quality scholarship and a deeper understanding of the Middle East and Africa, both historically and as contemporary realities. The Journal of the Middle East and Africa seeks to provide such understanding and stimulate further intellectual debate about them for the betterment of all.
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