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Why isn't America evacuating its citizens in Yemen?

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Twenty-year-old Summer Nasser is a born and bred New Yorker, but her strong family ties bring her to Yemen several times a year. On her latest trip, in February, she arrived just as the US was pulling out its diplomats and military personnel in face of rising violence in the country.

Nasser's ancestral home is on the brink of civil war. Yemen's powerful neighbor to the north, Saudi Arabia, is conducting airstrikes against a group called the Houthis, rebels who took over Yemen's capital last year and forced its president to flee the country earlier this month

"We're not feeling so great coming from the States to this kind of situation," Nasser says. "I never thought I would say this, but we really don't know if we [will] wake up the next morning. That's how intense the situation is in terms of security."

Yet while China has evacuated its nationals by sea and Pakistan and India are flying their citizens out, the United States has no plans to rescue Americans in Yemen — at least not for now. "We were actually really disappointed that, because [even] Somalia ... has evacuated their nationals," Nasser says.

She estimates that hundreds of Yemeni-Americans like herself are in the Aden, the port city on the Red Sea where she is staying. She acknowledges she knew about the State Department's call for Americans to leave Yemen, which it announced in February just as she was arriving in the country. But Nasser says she chose to wait for the Yemeni school year to end so she could take her younger relatives back to safety in the United States.

A US State Department spokesperson reiterated the official US position in an email to PRI's The World. "There are no plans for a US government-sponsored evacuation of US citizens at this time," wrote media office Niles Cole. "We encourage U.S. citizens to monitor the news and seek available departure options from Yemen, via air, land, or sea."

But that became less of an option last week, when the Saudis declared a no-fly zone over Yemen. "Now we're not allowed to fly out," Nasser says. "And we would think, because [the] US is supporting Saudi Arabia through logistics, that they would evacuate [US] citizens. We're trying our best to voice our nervousness and disappointment through respectful means, calling upon the US State Department to actually act and to evacuate the nationals."


© Nabeel Quaiti/Reuters

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205602y0f944fa1kp0pwf0.jpg
 
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Twenty-year-old Summer Nasser is a born and bred New Yorker, but her strong family ties bring her to Yemen several times a year. On her latest trip, in February, she arrived just as the US was pulling out its diplomats and military personnel in face of rising violence in the country.

Nasser's ancestral home is on the brink of civil war. Yemen's powerful neighbor to the north, Saudi Arabia, is conducting airstrikes against a group called the Houthis, rebels who took over Yemen's capital last year and forced its president to flee the country earlier this month

"We're not feeling so great coming from the States to this kind of situation," Nasser says. "I never thought I would say this, but we really don't know if we [will] wake up the next morning. That's how intense the situation is in terms of security."

Yet while China has evacuated its nationals by sea and Pakistan and India are flying their citizens out, the United States has no plans to rescue Americans in Yemen — at least not for now. "We were actually really disappointed that, because [even] Somalia ... has evacuated their nationals," Nasser says.

She estimates that hundreds of Yemeni-Americans like herself are in the Aden, the port city on the Red Sea where she is staying. She acknowledges she knew about the State Department's call for Americans to leave Yemen, which it announced in February just as she was arriving in the country. But Nasser says she chose to wait for the Yemeni school year to end so she could take her younger relatives back to safety in the United States.

A US State Department spokesperson reiterated the official US position in an email to PRI's The World. "There are no plans for a US government-sponsored evacuation of US citizens at this time," wrote media office Niles Cole. "We encourage U.S. citizens to monitor the news and seek available departure options from Yemen, via air, land, or sea."

But that became less of an option last week, when the Saudis declared a no-fly zone over Yemen. "Now we're not allowed to fly out," Nasser says. "And we would think, because [the] US is supporting Saudi Arabia through logistics, that they would evacuate [US] citizens. We're trying our best to voice our nervousness and disappointment through respectful means, calling upon the US State Department to actually act and to evacuate the nationals."


© Nabeel Quaiti/Reuters

——————————————————————
205602y0f944fa1kp0pwf0.jpg

Why? A sign of declining empire.

Maybe.
 
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Why? A sign of declining empire.

Maybe.

Standard procedure. Nothing more than that. Most evacuations are done through commercial flights and are requests, not through military assets and mandatory orders. People who ignore travel warnings, such as those issued by the US State Department are left to fend for themselves. If they want to evacuate they will be assisted by the DoS upon request.

The US State Department will explain the situation for you.

What the Department of State Can and Can't Do in a Crisis

As for declining.

:rofl:

Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Central Command

Why don't you take that discussion up with the Fifth Fleet which is stationed in the Middle-East and Central Command.

Oh, and the USN and USMC are undergoing an expansion, so again, no decline

Flurry of Contracts Spark US Navy Shipbuilding

Assets are positioned to help if needed; they aren't.

Rather than resorting to a hastily made conclusion, take a few minutes to read about US procedures.

:usflag:
 
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I guess Americans are looking for an excuse to directly attack the Houthis , especially after Saudi's failure and incompetence in saving Aden and stopping Houthis .

Since making an excuse isn't hard for Americans like the way they made one for Assad to take his chemical weapons or in 2003 when they attacked Iraq , We should be prepared for another fictional story .
 
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Why? A sign of declining empire.

Maybe.

Indeed, the State Department told American citizens to get the hell out earlier. Those who ignore warnings...well this what happens.
 
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Short answer is they have work to do since they are one way or another spies/contractors.
 
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