People's Democracy
(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
|
Vol. XXXIV
No.
09
February
28, 2010
|
Yemen
on the Brink
Yohannan
Chemarapally
YEMEN has been on the boil for some
time now but
it was the failed attempt by a young Nigerian to blow up an American
plane in Detroit on Christmas Day that
has brought the country into
Washington�s
direct line of fire. The Nigerian, a 24 year old London based student named Umar
Farouk
Abdulmutallab, was carrying explosives hidden in his undergarments. He
confessed to have received training in Yemen from the al Qaida in
the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). The Americans, along with their close allies,
the
British and the French, briefly closed down their embassies in the
Yemeni
capital San�a citing security concerns. The western governments are now
saying
that Yemen
is the new epicentre of global terrorism.
President Barak Obama as well as
his secretary of state,
Hillary Clinton have been issuing stern warnings to the government in Yemen
after the airplane terror incident. There have been implicit threats
that the US
would
intervene militarily if the Yemeni government would not accede to
demands for
coordinated military action against the AQAP. Immediately after the
abortive
attempt to blow up the American plane, the White House despatched the US
army general,
David Petraeus. He offered more military aid and intelligence sharing
with San'a.
The Yemeni foreign minister, Abubakr Qirbi, said that his government
has no
objection to sharing intelligence but remained opposed to joint
military action
with foreign forces.
The Obama administration is keen
to openly deploy
American special forces in Yemen
to tackle the AQAP. Media reports have said that American troops are
already on
the ground participating in joint operations with Yemeni security
forces. The
Washington Post in an editorial stated that the US
has already launched a military offensive in Yemen.
Clinton
said in early January that it was �time for the international community
to make
it clear to Yemen
that there are expectations and conditions for our continuing support
for the
government�.
The central government in Yemen
has been fighting more serious
battles for many years before the so called al Qaeda threat emerged.
Near the
border with Saudi
Arabia,
separatist Houthi rebels had been waging a long running guerrilla war.
In
August last year, President Ali Abdulllah Saleh had with great fanfare
announced the �final offensive� against the Houthis. But it was only
due to the
intervention of the Saudi army and help of American air power that the
Houthis
have been temporarily subdued though they are far from defeated. The
Houthis
have shown that they are capable of fighting on two fronts �against the
government forces as well as the invading Saudi forces. They briefly
took the
battle across to the Saudi borders in November. But for massive Saudi
and US
intervention, the Saleh government was in danger of collapsing. A
fragile
ceasefire agreement was signed between the government and the rebels in
late
January. Both sides have already started accusing each other of
violations of
the cease fire since then.
In the South, there is a renewed
secessionist movement
gaining momentum. South Yemen which
had gained
independence in 1967 after driving out the British had joined the North
in 1990
to form one united country. Since then the Southerners had felt
discriminated.
The South had a progressive political culture. It was known as the
Peoples
Democratic Republic of Yemen and was aligned with the Soviet Union in the seventies and the eighties
during the cold war. Many
in the South had opposed unification. A civil war erupted in 1994 with
the
central government in San'a using Salafist and jihadist elements to
crush the
former socialists in the south. Now those opposed to unification have
been
regrouping in the South, under the banner of the secessionist �Southern
Movement� posing another serious challenge to the 30 year rule of
President Ali
Abdullah Saleh. The Southern Movement is led by the former Marxist
leader, Ali
Salem al-Bidh, the man responsible for negotiating the first
reunification
agreement.
The �peace agreement� with the
Houthis is an
acknowledgement of the ground realities by the central government. The
Houthis
also known as the Zaidis are Shia tribesmen. They were the traditional
rulers
of Yemen
for more than a thousand years before the coup in 1972 which overthrew
the imamate.
Yemeni Shiite comprise around 40 per cent of the country�s population
of 22
million. Yemen
is among the poorest states in the region. To make matters worse, its
fast
depleting oil resources are expected to last only for another seven
years or
so. Much of the state�s revenues were earned through oil exports. The
region
which the Houthis dominate is among the most underdeveloped in Yemen.
The
Houthis first took up arms in 2004, citing political, economic and
religious
marginalisation by the Saudi and US backed central government. Both the
Houthis
as well as the Southern Movement are willing to find a peaceful
solution but
have insisted that the �corrupt and authoritarian� Saleh led government
has to
be replaced first.
Even at the best of times, the
Yemeni government�s
brief rarely extended beyond the major cities. The fiercely independent
tribes,
especially in the north, adhered to their own set of rules. Yemen
is also
awash with arms. The interior ministry put the number of guns at the
beginning
of the decade at 60 million. For every individual, there are three
guns. The
jihadist elements always had strong roots in the North. Tens of
thousands of
Yemenis were encouraged to go to Afghanistan to fight the
CIA
sponsored war there. These �Arab-Afghans� form the core of the al Qaida
in Yemen
today. Osama
bin Laden�s family roots are also in Yemen.
Al Qaeda first signalled its
presence in Yemen
by
launching an audacious attack on the American battleship---the USS Cole
in the
year 2000. President Saleh had to promise total cooperation with the US in the second Gulf War to prevent Yemen
being
targeted after the events of September 11, 2001. President Saleh had
taken a
principled stand during the first Gulf War and had declined to join the
American led coalition that launched a 40 day war against Iraq.
Washington as well as Yemen�s
Gulf neighbours were livid with Saleh at the time. More than a million
Yemenis
were sent packing from their secure jobs in the Gulf, adding to the
country�s
economic woes.
Then there is the perceived
threat of a so called Shia
crescent emerging that would encompass the Gulf region under Iranian
leadership. President Saleh has accused the Houthis of trying to
establish a
�Shiite zone� along the country�s common border with Saudi Arabia.
At the same time the
Yemeni president has alleged that the Houthis have established strong
links
with the al Qaeeda. The al Qaeda�s animosity to the Shia school of Islam
is well known. The Iranian government has strongly denied any
involvement and
has supported an untied Yemen.
At the same time Teheran has been very critical of Saudi and American
intervention in the internal affairs of the country.
The Saudi authorities allege
that the Houthis are
acting on behalf of Iranian interests. No clinching evidence has been
provided
about Iranian connivance and help for the Houthis. The Saudis, however
have
reasons to be worried. The Shia dominated population centres in Yemen lie adjacent to the restive
minority Shia
population in Saudi
Arabia
concentrated in the provinces of Najran and Jizan, the site of the
country�s
eastern oilfields. The Shias in Saudi Arabia are known to
be unhappy with the
Wahhabi brand of Sunni Islam and their own treatment as second class
citizens.
The Yemeni government has also
acceded to the Obama
administration�s pressures to adopt a more proactive role against the
groups
affiliated to the al Qaida. The government does not want to publicly
talk about
its close collaboration with the Americans. The popular mood in Yemen
remains
strongly anti-American. Yemen is now the recipient of the
largest US
counter-terrorism aid after Pakistan
US intelligence agencies
themselves said that
the number of al Qaeda activists does not exceed more than 200. Senior
Yemeni
officials have said that the so called threat being posed by al Qaeda
�is being
exaggerated�. The adviser to the Syrian Presidency, Bouthaina Shaaban,
who was
on an official visit to New Delhi said that what is being witnessed in
Yemen
today is an orchestrated attempt by the West to divide the Arabs on
sectarian
lines. She said that the al Qaida presence in Arab countries is being
used as a
pretext for military intervention by the US
in the Arabian Peninsula.
The situation in Yemen
has become further complicated because of the instability in Somalia, situated across the Gulf of Aden. The US sponsored overthrow of the
government led by the
Islamic Courts in 2008 has led to the rise of more militant groupings
like the
Al Shabab. According to western intelligence agencies this group has a
working
relationship with the AQAP in Yemen.
As a result of the meltdown of their state and increasing violence and
destitution, more than a million Somalis have taken refuge in Yemen.