A
moment of truth for our national sovereignty
Many Yemenis have spoken out that Yemen's sovereignty was undermined
by the US strike of Nov. 3 killing six Yemeni in a car near Marib.
Indeed, we launched a small survey asking average Yemeni citizens if
they thought that our sovereignty was affected by this action, and most
respondents replied that our country's sovereignty was undermined, regardless
if the Yemeni government agreed or did not agree on this action.
What is even more pathetic in my opinion is the way the Yemeni government
has dealt with this issue. Even though there seems to have been coordination
between the US and Yemen in the attack, it also seems that there has been
no coordination between them in terms of how to deal with the aftermath
of the incident.
The Yemeni government continued to insist for some time that the most
probable result of the explosion were the explosives within the car. However,
the US confession that the attack was preplanned and implemented by the
CIA with the knowledge of the Yemeni government has put the Yemeni government
in a difficult situation.
People have once again remembered the stories of the USS Cole. The
Yemeni government said it was an internal explosion, then it turned to
be otherwise. The government said that an electrical shock was the result
of the bomb at the UK embassy after the USS Cole. Then came the Limburg
case, when our government jumped to a conclusion that it may have been
a gas problem, and it proved otherwise.
Today, we see that the Yemeni government was put again in the corner.
More than four different US sources say that Nov. 3 was a CIA attack and
it was confirmed by even more sources. Just today, I was browsing the Internet
for more news and I found the Pentagon officials saying that this act was
normal and it serves the war against terrorism.
What will the government say? Is the US lying about it? Is this a conspiracy?
Why doesn't the government just say the truth, which will be known sooner
or later? I guess the government fears public reaction.
I want to comfort the government that there would be no public reaction.
People - as can be concluded from the survey in this issue - are in such
desperate economic hardships that they can barely raise an objection. They
want to get on with their daily lives regardless of what happens. They
have other priorities to deal with, especially in the holy month of Ramadan,
when Yemenis tend to have a time to relax and sleep until noon.
In my opinion, Yemenis should not worry too much about their sovereignty
and national pride simply because all the Arab world is lacking complete
sovereignty because of the Israeli occupation and the US influence. We
have become weak, defenseless, and unable to react to any sovereignty violation.
Why should the government try to hide those facts any more? We all
know they are true. And continuing to hide them will only damage the trust
of Yemenis in their government further. Our government must have a moment
of truth for our national sovereignty. We already know that it was undermined,
and there's nothing more to hide.

|