Considering the off-putting reality, it is difficult to imagine a future scenario in which Yemen could avoid a fully-fledged conflict or a civil war. It is true that much could be done to fend off this bleak scenario, such as sincere efforts towards reconciliation and bold steps to achieve transparent democracy. There should be an unbending challenge to the ongoing undeclared US war in the impoverished nation. Alas, none of the parties in Yemen’s prevailing political order has the sway, desire or moral authority to lead the vitally necessary transition. It is surely not the one proposed by the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), but rather a homegrown political evolution that responds to Yemen’s own political, security and economic priorities, and not to the strategic interests of ‘Friends of Yemen’, led by the United States. Although it is much less discussed compared to Egypt’s crippling political upheaval, or even Tunisia’s unfolding crisis, Yemen’s ongoing predicament is in fact far more complex. It directly involves too many players, not least al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and the bloody US drone war that is unleashed from Djibouti, among other places. In the period between July 27 to August 9, 34 people were killed in Yemen by US drone attacks. The US government automatically considers those killed al-Qaeda terrorists, even if civilians are confirmed to be among the dead and wounded. Most media qualifies such statements by describing the victims as ‘suspected militants’. International human rights groups and Yemen’s civil society organisations – not to mention the enraged people of Yemen – insist on recognising the toll on civilians. Entire Yemeni communities are in a constant state of panic caused by the buzzing metal monsters that operate in complete disregard of international law and the country’s own sovereignty. Frankly, at this stage it is hard to think of Yemen as a sovereign and territorially unified nation. While 40 percent of the country’s population faces food insecurity, with even more on the brink of enlarging the appalling statistic, the country’s foreign policy has been long held hostage to the whims of outsiders. There is a lack of trust in the central government, which has historically shown its corruption and incompetence by allowing non-state actors to move in and fill the security and economic vacuum. Prior to the Yemeni revolution in January 2011, the US was the most influential outside power shaping and manipulating the Yemeni central government. Its goal was clear - to conduct its so-called war on terror in Yemen, unhindered by such irritants as international law or even verbal objection from Sanaa. The now deposed President Ali Abdullah Saleh, whose thirty year long family-run dictatorship was the stuff of legend in terms of its corruption and selfishness, obliged. He too had his personal wars to fight and needed US consent to maintain his family-controlled power apparatus. Just weeks prior to the revolution, then Secretary of State Hilary Clinton visited Sanaa. She applied gentle pressure on Saleh to dissuade him from pushing the parliament to scrap term limits on his presidency, as if three decades in power was not enough. At the heart of the mission was the expansion of the counter-terrorism campaign in Yemen. The bloody US campaign involving the Pentagon and the CIA has been under reported. One of the reasons why the war was never classified as a ‘war’ is because it was conducted under political cover from Sanaa itself and sold as if it were military cooperation between two sovereign governments against a common enemy: al-Qaeda. But reality was of course hugely different. Much of Saleh’s supposed anti-AQAP efforts were in fact channeled against the revolutionary forces and political opposition that gathered in their millions to demand freedom and an end to the dictatorship. What are the chances that the US didn’t know such a well-reported fact? In fact, AQAP expansion was unprecedented during the revolution, but not because of the revolution itself. Saleh seemed to have made a strategic choice to leave large swathes of the country undefended in order to allow sudden AQAP expansion. Within a few months, al-Qaeda had mobilized to occupy large areas in the country’s southern governorates. This was done to strengthen Sanaa’s official discourse that the revolution was in fact an act of terrorism and thus quashing the revolution was more or less part of Yemen and the US’s ‘war on terror.’ Despite the many massacres, the revolution persisted, but Saleh’s strategy allowed for greater US military involvement. Unlike Egypt, the US military interest in Yemen is not merely done through buying loyalty with a fixed amount of money and sustaining a friendly rapport with the army. It is about control and the ability to conduct any military strategy that Washington deems necessary. And unlike Afghanistan, Yemen is not an occupied country, at least not technically. Thus the US strategy regarding Yemen has to strike a sustainable balance between military firmness and political caution. This explains the leading role played by the US in negotiating a safe path for the central government, army and the ruling party – excluding Saleh himself – to elude the uncompromising demands of the country’s revolutionary forces. To some degree, the US has succeeded. Part of that success was due to Yemen’s existing political and territorial fragmentation. With Houthis controlling large parts of northern Yemen, the southern secessionist movement Haraki in the south, militant infiltration throughout the country, and a political opposition that has constantly lagged behind a much more organised and progressive Yemeni street, Yemeni society is much too susceptible to outside pressures and manipulation. The Yemeni revolution was never truly treated as such, but instead as a crisis that needed to be managed. The GCC-brokered power transfer initiative was meant to be a roadmap out of the crisis. However, it merely replaced Saleh with Abd-Rabbo Mansour Hadi and set the stage for the National Dialogue Conference, which has been underway since March 18. The transition thus far has been buttressed by the backing of the ‘Friends of Yemen’, so as to ensure that the process leading up to the elections scheduled for 2014, is done under the auspices and blessings of those with an unmistakable interest in Yemen’s present and future. It is barely helpful that Yemen’s supposedly united opposition is hardly that, and differences are widening between the coalition of opposition groups named the Joint Meeting Parties (JMPs). One example was publically displayed following the army-led coup in Egypt on July 3. While supporters of the Islah Party – considered an ally of the Muslim Brotherhood – protested against the coup, other coalition members and the Houthis greeted the news of the coup with gun shots and public celebration. To make matters worse, the interim president Hadi congratulated Egypt’s transitional government for its post-coup role. Even if the revolution is yet to reap tangible results in its quest for fundamental change towards democracy, the national mood, separate from Hadi and the opposition, is unlikely to accept half-baked solutions. Meanwhile, the militants are regaining strength and so is the US political intervention and drone war. All are, in turn, contributing to burgeoning discontent and anti-American sentiment. Between revolutionary expectations and less than mediocre reforms, Yemen is likely to embark on yet another new struggle whose consequences will be too serious for any disingenuous political transition to manage. Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is: My Father was A Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press). The views expressed by the author do not necessarily represent or reflect the editorial policy of Arabstoday.
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