The ban, which targets only precision-guided munitions, doesn’t call into question much of the roughly $112 billion of weapons sold to Saudi Arabia already during the Obama administration. Nor will it stop current U.S. operations refueling Saudi coalition planes on all their bombing missions. It won’t stop the U.S. from sharing intelligence or from helping the Saudi coalition with targeting guidance. And importantly, it won’t hinder arms sales to any of Saudi Arabia’s coalition partners like the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, or Kuwait—all of which received the green light on major arms transfers within the past two months.
The United States, in fact, recently approved the Saudi purchase of nearly 50 CH-47E Chinook helicopters and the associated equipment for $3.51 billion. This sale escapes the proposed ban even though the helicopters could be used in the campaign against Yemen. In fact, the only sizable pending sale the ban would prevent involves 16,000 guidance kits, not actual bombs. The guidance systems would convert “dumb” bombs to “smart” bombs. Ironically, on the day officials announced the ban the U.S. delivered the first shipment of F‑15SAs from an existing deal to Saudi Arabia. From now on Saudi Arabia will be using some of America’s most-advanced heavy fighters to drop dumb bombs. So in effect, all this ban does is force the Saudis to keep bombing Yemen with weapons more likely to hit civilians by accident.
And we can’t forget arms exports to Saudi Arabia’s coalition members. On December 8, the United Arab Emirates struck a deal worth $3.5 billion for Apache AH-64E helicopters. That same day a deal was finalized with Qatar for $81 million worth of C‑17 parts and $700 million of logistical support services and equipment. In November, Qatar received the yes they’d been waiting for on a $21.1 billion deal for 72 F‑15QAs. On December 13, Kuwait was granted the ability to buy 218 M1A2 tanks for a tidy $1.7 billion, after closing a deal for F/A‑18E/Fs earlier in November for $10.1 billion.
Measures with more traction and real power to cramp the air campaign against Yemen have faced stiff resistance from Congress and the White House. Several months ago, Sen. Rand Paul (R‑Ky.), Sen. Chris Murphy (D‑Conn.), Sen. Al Franken (D‑Minn.), and Sen. Mike Lee (R‑Utah) offered a joint resolution to block the sale of Abrams tanks to Saudi Arabia. The Senators cited Saudi Arabia’s record in Yemen as clear motivation to block the sale. “Selling $1.15 billion in tanks, guns, ammunition, and more to a country with a poor human rights record embroiled in a bitter war is a recipe for disaster and an escalation of an ongoing arms race in the region,” said Sen. Paul. The measure was defeated.
More recently Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D‑HI) introduced the “Stop Arming Terrorists Act,” legislation aimed at stopping arms sales to nations suspected of sponsoring terrorist groups. According to Gabbard’s office the bill would effectively cut off the flow of weapons to Saudi Arabia and hinder their activities in Yemen. It seems unlikely Gabbard’s bill will fare any better than previous attempts.
In the end, the Obama administration’s proposed arms sale ban is at best a weak attempt at “virtue signaling” – an effort to distance the United States from an ugly war it has no real justification for supporting. At worst, the ban obscures the fact that the United States continues to fan the flames of conflict through its arms sales. A better approach would be for the Foreign Military Sales program to shut off the flow of American weapons to Saudi Arabia and its coalition partners. This approach wouldn’t end the war in Yemen, or magically bring peace and stability to the region. But it would ensure that the United States isn’t underwriting illegal and counterproductive conflicts. And that is a good place to start.