Yemen Peace Project

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National security experts call on Administration to extend TPS for Yemenis

Today, more than 30 former US federal government officials sent a letter to Secretary of Homeland Security Nielsen and Secretary of State Pompeo, urging them to extend and re-designate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Yemen. The full text of their letter is below.

Dear Secretary Nielsen and Secretary Pompeo:

We, the undersigned national security experts, many of whom are former United States officials, have watched Yemen’s ongoing civil war and humanitarian crisis with grave concern. We write to affirm that the country’s ongoing armed conflict and extraordinary and temporary conditions, which justified the extension of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to people from Yemen living in the United States in March 2017, persist. These conditions demand both the extension  of TPS for an estimated 1,200 individuals in the United States and its re-designation for Yemeni immigrants who seek to reside here without fear of deportation and separation from their families. We urge you to take these steps as a small but vital protective measure that neither they nor the United States can do without. 

Yemen’s ongoing armed conflict risks the life and freedom of Yemenis should they be forced to return to the country. The conflict has deepened significantly since the previous TPS extension, making life impossible for many living within Yemen. All parties are indiscriminately targeting civilians in a war that, according to both the United Nations Security Council and successive U.S. administrations, does not have a military solution. Civilian casualties stem from mortar and sniper fire into civilian areas, use of landmines, and recruitment of child soldiers, in addition to ongoing airstrikes, which have repeatedly struck residences, marketplaces, hospitals, and electrical and water infrastructure. 

The on-the-ground fighting and the air campaign, combined with the access restrictions on Yemen’s major air, sea and land ports and war profiteering by parties to the conflict, has contributed to what the UN describes as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, an extraordinary condition. 22.2 million Yemenis--roughly 75 percent of the population--need some form of humanitarian assistance. Yemen suffers from major food insecurity with an increasing threat of famine, where 8.4 million people do not know when or how they will get their next meal. Preventable diseases are rampant, with over one million suspected cases of cholera recorded since the start of the conflict. As long as the war continues, external powers restrict access to the country’s ports, and militias profit from an expanding war economy, the humanitarian crisis will worsen, making the involuntary return of Yemenis inconceivable.  

The United States has increasingly been involved in the ongoing war in Yemen since March 2015. The U.S. government has provided material assistance to a major intervening coalition of regional actors, led by Saudi Arabia, in the form of air refueling, targeting support, and weapons transfers, and thus bears, at the very least, what current U.S. Ambassador to Yemen Matthew Tueller has called a “moral responsibility” toward the conflict. At the same time, the current administration has repeatedly stated both its support for the conflict’s political settlement and its commitment to alleviating the worst aspects of the humanitarian crisis. 

The sudden return of over one thousand individuals, however, will undermine the developmental and diplomatic tools available to the United States for a strong, principled foreign policy and national security strategy towards Yemen. If forced to return, these Yemenis are likely to be targeted by militias, join the swelling numbers of internal refugees, or otherwise find themselves in acute need of humanitarian relief. Such a return could also bolster the propaganda efforts of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and the self-described Islamic State, whose defeat in Yemen is an ongoing U.S. national security objective. Finally, ending TPS for Yemen would harm U.S. standing among the international community, as our allies look to us for leadership in addressing the world’s extraordinary humanitarian crises.

It is in the United States national security interest to redesignate and extend TPS for Yemen. The administration must consider and understand the full weight of its security and moral responsibility toward Yemen in making this decision. We strongly encourage you to grant TPS status for Yemen, so that those who have escaped the civil war are not forcibly returned. 

Sincerely, 

Jon B. Alterman
Senior Vice President, Director of Middle East Program, & Zbigniew Brzezinksi Chair in Global Security and Geostrategy, Center for Strategic and International Studies

Daniel Benaim
Former Middle East Advisor to the Vice President

Antony Blinken
Former Deputy Secretary of State

Barbara Bodine
Former U.S. Ambassador to Yemen (1997-2001)
Director of the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University

Amanda Catanzano
Former National Security Council Director for Strategic Planning and Policy Planning Staff

Sarah Charles
Former National Security Council Director for Strategic Planning

Bathsheba Crocker
Former Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs

Elisa Catalano Ewers
Former National Security Council and Department of State Official

Gerald Feierstein
Former U.S. Ambassador to Yemen (2010 - 2013)

Jonathan Finer
Former Chief of Staff and Director of Policy Planning, U.S. Department of State

Ilan Goldenberg
Former Chief of Staff to the Special Envoy for Israeli-Palestinian  negotiations

Philip Gordon
Former White House Coordinator for the Middle East, North Africa, and the Gulf Region

Cindy Huang
Former Director of Policy, Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations, U.S. Department of State

Brian Katulis
Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress

Nabeel Khoury
Former Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in San’a

Jeremy Konyndyk
Former Director, Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance, United States Agency for International Development

Paul R. Pillar
Former National Intelligence Officer for the Near East and South Asia

Dan Mahanty
Former Director, Office of Security and Human Rights, Department of State

Robert Malley
Former White House Coordinator for the Middle East, North Africa, and the Gulf Region
President & CEO, International Crisis Group

Andrew Miller
Former National Security Council Director for Egypt

Suzanne Nossel
Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Organizations

Wendy Patten
Former Director for Multilateral and Humanitarian Affairs, National Security Council 

Anne Patterson
Former Assistant Secretary of State for Middle East and North Africa

Jeffrey Prescott
Former National Security Council Senior Director for Iran, Iraq, Syria and the Gulf States

Samantha Power
Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations

Bruce Riedel
Former Special Assistant to the President for Near East and South Asia Affairs

William Rugh
Former U.S. Ambassador to Yemen (1981-1984)

Stephen A. Seche
Former U.S. Ambassador to Yemen (2007-2010)

Wendy R. Sherman
Former Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs

Anne-Marie Slaughter
Former Director of Policy Planning, U.S. Department of State

Dana Shell Smith
Former Ambassador to the State of Qatar (2014-2017)
Senior Non-Resident Fellow, Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University

Joshua Weinberg
Former Senior Analyst, Special Operations Command - Central, and Defense Intelligence Agency

Lawrence Wilkerson
U.S. Army Colonel (Ret.), and former Chief of Staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell