Civil War in Yemen
Asif Haroon raja
Roots of Conflict
Sectarian and tribal divides in Yemen had
sharpened during the long rule of President Gen Ali Abdullah Saleh. Separatist
movement in South Yemen sought independent country. Saleh unified the country for the first time as an independent
state in 1990. The Houthi movement in North Yemen, which
champions Yemen's Zaidi Shia Muslim minority,and backed by Iran, had fought a
series of rebellions against Saleh during his rule.Saleh had stated that ruling Yemen and its fractious
politics was like dancing on the heads of snakes.
The conflict in north was re-energized in 2004 by the
government's attempt to arrest Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi, a Zaidi religious leader of the Houthis and a former parliamentarian on whose
head the government had placed a $55,000 bounty.Several military campaigns by Saleh, with Saudi armed
support, failed to defeat them.
Situation flared up after Arab
Spring
Trouble
flared up after the onset of the Arab Spring in 2011. Houthis took control of the northern most mountains of Yemen around
their stronghold of SadahProvince and neighboring areas
in early March 2011.
Pro-democracy
protesters took to the streets in a bid to force President Saleh to end his
33-year rule. He responded with economic concessions, but refused to resign. The capital city Sana’a became highly
turbulent owing to clashes between the protestors including tribal militias and
the military. Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) led Gulf States prevailed upon
reluctant Saleh to make way for his Vice President Abdu RabbuMansour Al-Hadi, a Sunni southerner.
Saleh who was a Zaidi, didn’t reconcile to his
ouster since he desperately wanted his son Ahmad Saleh, Commander Republican
Guards, to become the president.
Transfer of Power
Under
an internationally-brokered deal, Yemen finally saw a transfer of power in
November 2011 to Hadi, paving the way for elections on February 21, 2012. Hadireceived 99.2% votes, but Houthi tribe in
northeastern Yemen (9% of total population) boycotted the election, and the
security situation kept deteriorating. Hadi's
attempts at constitutional and budget reforms sparked outcry by Houthi rebels.
Fall
of Sana’a
With the passage of
time, tribal groups in North Yemen that make up the Houthi Ansarallah movement
in which many are Zaidi Shias gained strength. With active support of army
units loyal to Saleh, those among the Sunnis disillusioned
with the transition as well as Iran, Houthismanaged
to capture capital city of Sana’a in September 2014. They demanded lower fuel prices and a new government. President
Hadi was forced to sign a power sharing agreement.
Finding faults in the agreement, the Houthis
seized the presidential palace in January 2015 and put Hadi under house arrest.
Hadi managed to flee to Aden next month. Houthis proceeded to push southwards
towards 2nd largest city Aden and next to third largest city of Taiz
in March 2015 other major cities in the south and southwest. Thereon, the power
pendulum swung in favor of Houthis and strength of Hadi loyalists kept
depleting. Once the pressure of Houthis gathered steam in Aden, and Hadisought
refuge in KSA in March 2015, Riyadh considered it necessary to save Aden.
KSA Security Threatened
Houthis presented a big threat to the security
of KSA and Holy mosques as well as to the Arabian Peninsula and backyard of
KSA. With Yemen and strategic chokepoint Bab al- Mandab in its bag, it would
have become easier for Iran to create unrest in KSA, particularly among its
southern regions bordering northern Yemen where the tribes are affiliated with
each other and also the Shia heavy province in Eastern KSA which had become
restive in 2011 as a result of Arab Spring.
Gain in Yemen strengthened Iran’s arc around
KSA formed by Iran-Iraq-Syria-Hezbollah axis and made its task of bringing a
regime change in Shia heavy Bahrain easier. Loss of Yemen to Houthis would have
established credentials of Iran as the regional policeman, a role aspired by
KSA.
Explosive situation in Yemen made Arabian
Peninsula vulnerable to exploitation by foreign powers as well as Al-Qaeda and
Islamic State (IS) and thus a threat to the integrity and sovereignty of KSA.
Joint Arab Force
Arab
League gave a go-ahead to the formation of Joint Arab Force (JAF) and to launch
air war against the Houthis. A coalition of eight Arab States, KSA, Egypt,
Jordan, Sudan, Bahrain,United Arab Emirates (UAE),
Kuwait and Morocco was formed. However, the Arabs knew that air war alone wouldn’t
fetch decisive results and that the Houthis would continue making advances.
KSA’s
Expectations
Mindful of the weakness of the Arab
militaries, KSA looked towards Pakistan, Egypt and Turkey to provide ground
forces for the Arab Force to put fear into the hearts of Houthis and also to
deter Iran as well as IS. It wanted a division size from Pak Army to take on
Houthis directly, PAF to lead the air assault and Pak Navy to become part of
blockade of Gulf of Aden.
KSA expectantly looked towards the two longstanding allies,
Egypt and Pakistan. However, to its utter disappointment, both refused to
provide ground troops for the war. Pakistan’s parliament unanimously voted
against any participation in the war and option of neutrality strained
Pakistan’s relations with KSA and UAE. Yemen’s neighborOman, also refused to
join the Saudi led coalition.
Egypt’sRole
Gen Fatah al-Sisi who had deposed Muhammad
Morsi and gained power in Egypt in July 2013 as a result of a military coup expressed
keenness to play a lead role in the war to re-establish its credentials as
leader of the Arab world, which it had lost after signing peace treaty with
Israel in 1979. Sisi was indebted to KSA for recognizing his regime and
providing $10 billion assistance.
Although Egypt promised to provide substantial
air, naval and land forces, it avoided getting involved in ground fighting
inside Yemen because of its bitter experience in 1962-70 conflict in which it
had lost 24000 soldiers fighting Houthis and KSA was supporting their
opponents. Exhaustion in this prolonged conflict was a reason behind Egypt’s
shocking defeat at the hands of Israelis in 1967 Arab-Israeli War. KSA also had
a rough experience in its fight with Houthis in 2009 in which it lost over 300
soldiers in a span of 3 months.
Start of Air War
Failing to get troops from Pakistan, KSA
deployed troops along its southern border facing Yemen and on
March 26, 2015, the Saudi-led JAF launched air attacks against Houthi-Saleh forces
at the request of Yemeni President Hadi, duly legitimized by the UN.
Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman (MBS) was the chief mover and was confident
that Houthis will be humbled within months.
All agreed to stem Iran’s interventionist
policy in Arab world and to restore Hadi’s government. The
coalition received logistical and intelligence support including air
refueling from the US, UK and France. The JAF conducted 19000 raids
killing 60,000 people but still couldn’t pushout Houthis from Sana’a. The air war has been costing Riyadh $5-6 billion a
month.
ArmsSupplybyIran. Numerous Iranian weapons shipments to Houthi rebels
were intercepted in the Gulf of Aden by a Saudi naval blockade in place since
April 2015. In response, Iran stationed three warships in Gulf
of Aden which gave rise to the fear of Yemen crisis morphing into a bigger
conflict. However, covert assistance had become difficult in the wake of arms
embargo imposed upon Houthis by the UNSC on April 14, 2014 and Russia abstaining
from voting.
Coalition Ground Forces. UAE provided largest contingent of ground troops and have
been instrumental in recapturing lost territories from Houthis. They played a
lead role in the battles of Aden, Taiz and Hodeida. UAE forces have also
successfully protected shipping routes in Gulf of Aden.UAE military has been
training 90,000 Yemenisoldiers and coordinating employment of 16 Yemeni
militias numbering 20,000 men fighting the Houthis in Hodeida. Saudis have
restricted their effort to air only as well as protection of 1100 miles border
with Yemen.
Houthis Gains
By September 2015, bulk of port city of Aden came under the
control of Houthis. Apart from the battle in the north, Aden saw intense
battlebetweenYemeni Armysupportedby coalition ground troops and Houthis
supported by loyalists of Saleh in Yemen Army and aided by Iran in the south.
The
Houthis took control of Hodeida and captured 75% of the third largest city of
Taiz by August 2015. They were partially pushed backfrom Taizin 2018 by
coalition troops.
The Houthis gained control over bulk of the
country and installed their government under Abdul Malik Houthi. It was matter
of time for the Houthis to dismantle most positions held by beleaguered Hadi
loyalists in southern Yemen including leftover pockets of Aden since air
attacks had done little to stem their tide. They were confident that air war
will not help the Arabs to win the war. UN mandated negotiations also suited
them since they were in a position to negotiate from a stronger wicket.
Iran emerged as the chief gainer since it is the only country which
enjoys strong influence over Houthis.
Counter
offensive. Yemeni forces loyal to
Hadi helped by the coalition ground troops led by UAE troops drove out the
Houthis and their allies out of much of Southern Yemen over the next few
months.Hadi set up a temporary home in Aden but his government struggled to
provide basic services and security to the people of Aden.A UN effort to broker peace talks between allied Houthi
rebels and the internationally recognized Yemeni government stalled in the
summer of 2016.
Non-state Actors. The turmoil allowed entry to al-Qaeda in Yemen. It grew in
strength and converted Yemen into its main base for the Arabian Peninsula.Its fighters
were subjected to 250 drone attacks by the US from Socotra military base.Later
on, IS also sneaked in.Militants from al-Qaeda and the
IS
took advantage of the chaos by seizing territory in the south and carrying out
deadly attacks, notably in Aden.Houthis-Hezbollah ties deepened.
USA’s Involvement. The US combated terrorism in Yemen in collaboration
with the Yemeni government since the bombing of the USS Cole in 2000. Since
2002, the US carried out airstrikes/ drone attacks against Al-Qaeda and the
IS in Yemen. In 2016, the US conducted 35 strikes, 130 in 2017 and 36 in 2018. Like Obama,
Trump is also supporting the air war but the Congress of late is reluctant to
vote for new arms sale to the coalition and so is UK. In October
2018, Mike Pompeo, and James Mattis, both called for an end to the fighting and
publicly expressed support for peace talks proposed by the United Nations (UN).
Houthis - Saleh’s Alliance
Nexus of Houthis and the army units loyal to
Saleh neither had the capacity to overpower all regions of Yemen nor to
retaliate against air attacks because of non-availability of ackack guns or to mount
ground invasion inside KSA. 3000 miles deep desert stretching from Yemen-KSA
border up to built-up areas in depth is too formidable to traverse by
attackers.
Foreign accounts/assets
of Saleh and his son Ahmad were frozen and ban imposed on their travelling.
These development had to a large extent tilted the scales in favor of Arab
supported Hadi regime in exile. Had the US decided to target Houthis with
drones from Djibouti, it would have added to their troubles.
In July 2016, the Houthis and the loyalists of former
President Saleh, announced the formation of a “Political Council” to govern
Sana’a and much of northern Yemen.
In December 2017, Saleh broke with the Houthis and called
for his followers to take up arms against them. Saleh was killed in the same
monthand his forcesdefeated.
In January 2018, fighting broke out between KSA backed Yemeni
government forces and UAE-backed separatist Yemeni forces in Aden.
Induction of Missiles. Provision of ballistic missiles
and later on drones to Houthis by Iran and launch of missilesinto cities of KSA
including Riyadh in November 2017 added a new dimension to threat perception.
Enforcement
of Blockade. Missile threat prompted the Saudi-led
coalition to tighten its blockade of Yemen. The coalition said it wanted to
halt the smuggling of weapons to the rebels by Iran - an accusation Tehran
denied - but the restrictions led to substantial increases in the prices of
food and fuel, pushing more people into food insecurity.
Battle
of Hodeida
On June 13, 2018, 2000 UAE soldiers and others launched a
sweeping ground operation codenamed Golden Sparrow along the Red Sea coast up
to the rebel-held Red Sea city of Hodeida, whose port is the principal lifeline
for almost two thirds of Yemen's population. The port city as well as two other
ports along the Red Sea had come under the control of Houthis. Aim was to cut
off supplies to Houthis and force them to negotiate.
After fierce battles, Stockholm agreement led to ceasefire on
December 18th2018and entry of the UN force to separate the two
antagonists and superviseredeployment of the two warring antagonists.Fighting
renewed in May 2019 and both sides continue to violate ceasefire. Withdrawal
has so far not taken place.
DrawdownofUAEtroops
Sudden decision of UAE to pullout its forces from Yemen is bound
to change the complexion of the war. Reportedly, it has already withdrawn 80%
of its 5000 troops.It will be a big setback for KSA since for four years UAE
has been the military linchpin of Saudi-led war and has been lavishly providing
soldiers, funds and weapons and was in the vanguard of ground war. UAE forces
were the only effective check against the Houthis. Major reason is that it has
become too costly; secondly it has been realized that there is no military
solution to the Yemen crisis. UAE military is confident that the 90,000 Yemeni
soldiers trained by them will be able to fill the vacuum after their departure.
KSA will now be in the forefront and MBS will be looking toward
Washington for greater military support in the form of Special Forces, military
advisers, intelligence sharing and drone war. MBS has already approved bigger
presence of US troops at the airbase in KSA. Houthis on the other hand will get
encouraged to renew fighting in three major cities and capture them.
Human-rights Abuses
The
Saudi-led coalition
have been targeting Houthi positions and their military installations including
missiles arsenal. Fighting is going on in 15 of 22 provinces of Yemen. Human
and material collateral damage is increasing with every passing day. Since
2015, Human Rights Watch has documented about 90 apparently unlawful coalitionairstrikes, which
have hit homes, markets, hospitals,
schools, and mosques. Coalition has used at least six types of widely
banned cluster munitions produced
in Brazil, the US, and the UK.
The coalition has conducted
scores of indiscriminate and disproportionate airstrikes killing thousands of
civilians and hitting civilian objects in violation of the laws of war, using
munitions sold by the US, UK, and others, including widely banned cluster
munitions.
The Saudi-led coalition’s restrictions on
imports have worsened the dire humanitarian situation. The
coalition has delayed and diverted fuel tankers, closed critical ports, and
stopped goods from entering Houthi-controlled seaports. Fuel needed to power generators to
hospitals and pump water to homes has also been blocked.
Houthi forces have blocked and confiscated food and medical
supplies and denied access to populations in need. They have
imposed heavy restrictions on aid workers and interfered with aid delivery. Both sides have recruited boy soldiers as young as 11
years.
Houthi forces have used banned
antipersonnel landmines, recruited children, and fired artillery
indiscriminately into cities such as Taiz and Aden, killed and wounded
civilians, took
hostages, used torture and other ill-treatment of detainees and fired 500 missiles and 150 drone attacks into KSA
from Taiz city.
Civilians Worst Affected.The
armed conflict in Yemen has taken a terrible toll on the civilian
population.Civilians are suffering from a lack of basic services, a spiraling
economic crisis, and broken governance, health, education, and judicial
systems.
Human Catastrophe
Parties
to the conflict have exacerbated what the UN has called the world’s largest
humanitarian catastrophe, with 14 million people at
risk of starvation and repeated outbreaks of deadly diseases like cholera.
Famine is knocking at the doors of war-stricken regions.
War is in its 5th
year but there are little signs of its abating. Till June 2019, the death toll reached
the 100,000 mark of killed and wounded.
DemandforCeasefire
Immediate ceasefire was demanded by Iran and
Russia. Ceasefire, or even operational pause would have been to the advantage
of Houthis since they were in control of bulk of the territory and would have
helped them in receiving military/logistics assistance and to consolidate their
gains. In case of proposed dialogue, they would have dictated terms of their
choice. Houthi government in Yemen would be pro-Iran and anti-KSA.
These stark realities impelled KSA and its
Arab allies to disagree cessation of air war till Houthis agreed to surrender
arms and re-establish Hadi regime and then open dialogue.
WaraDisaster
The war in Yemen has been a disaster for the US interests, for Saudi
interests, and above all for the Yemeni people. It has been a strategic blunder
as well.
The conflict
continues to take a heavy toll on Yemeni civilians, making Yemen the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
The UN estimates that the civilian casualty toll has exceeded 15,000 killed or injured.
Twenty-two million Yemenis remain in need of assistance, eight million are at
risk of famine, and a cholera outbreak has affected over one million people.
All sides of the conflict are reported to have violated human
rights and international humanitarian law.
Women in Yemen face severe discrimination in
law and practice. Violence against women
in Yemen has increased—an estimated 3 million women and girls were
at risk of violence by 2018, according to the UN. Forced marriage rates,
including child marriage, have increased. Yemen has no minimum age of marriage.
They cannot marry without the permission of their male guardian and do not have
equal rights to divorce, inheritance, or child custody. Lack of legal
protection leaves them exposed to domestic and sexual violence.
Warmerchants
The US has been a party to the conflict and
may be complicit in coalition attacks in which it took part. The US has
provided in-air refueling and other tactical support to coalition forces. In
November 2018, the US said it was ending in-air refueling to the coalition. The
UK has provided training and weaponry to members of the coalition. The US, UK,
France, and others have continued to sell munitions and other arms to KSA and
other coalition states.
Several US and UK lawmakers have challenged
their governments’ continuation of these sales. In last October, the
European Parliament called on EU member states to suspend weapons sales to KSA
due to its conduct in Yemen, decried coalition war crimes, and called for
sanctions against those responsible for obstructing humanitarian assistance.
Trump has repeatedly vetoed US Congress legislation designed to curb US supply
of weapons for the Yemen civil war.
WayForward
There has been enough of bloodshed and most
victims are innocent civilians caught between the crossfire of two antagonists.
Conflict has not made KSA or the region any safer. Air war has provided
justification to Iran to keep supplying arms to Houthis. One thing is certain.
Military victory is not possible and political settlement is the only way out.
While USA must lay its hands off Yemen, JAF
should stop the futile air war, and Iran should stop interfering in Yemen and
should prevail upon Houthis to lay down arms and opt for negotiations. KSA
should be advised to give peace a chance.Like in Hodeida, the UN must step in
to broker peace in other major cities, and earnestly work towards a negotiated
settlement between the Hadi regime and the Houthis. The international
communityand aid giving agencies should further intensify their efforts towards
rehabilitation of the war affected people and rebuilding of the war-torn
country.
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