War On Terror or War On Disaffected
Yemenis?
by Ron Jacobs
http://dissidentvoice.org/, December
31st, 2009
As if the US interventions in Iraq and
Afghanistan were not enough to satiate the Empire's bloodlust,
the calls are increasing for an all-out war on the nation of Yemen.
The reason given for this intervention is that the man who apparently
wanted to blow up an airliner on Christmas Day 2009 spent some
time there and may have received his instructions while he was
visiting. Like the increasingly bloody occupation of Afghanistan,
Washington wants the world to believe that attacking a nation
that hosts organizations intent on resisting US domination will
somehow end the existence of those organizations and make everyone
safer. Left unsaid in this rather simplistic equation are the
obvious facts. Over eight years of war and occupation of Afghanistan
has neither stopped the desire of politically nor religiously
motivated individuals to blow up airliners and other structures
in their war against US cultural and economic imperialism. Nor
has it broken the back of the groups in Afghanistan that also
oppose the US intervention in their country. In fact, if we are
to believe intelligence reports from various US agencies, these
groups are not only still in existence, they have mutated politically
and are at least as strong as they were before the US invasion
in 2001.
In recent months, parts of Yemen have
come under attack by Saudi Arabian forces backing the government
there. In recent weeks, the Saudis have been supported by the
US military. It seems quite likely that there is more to the growing
likelihood of deeper US military involvement in Yemen than the
visit of Mr. Abdulmutallab. Saudi Arabia and North Yemen fought
a war in 1934 when a prince formerly aligned with Ibn Saud switched
allegiance to the Yemeni Prince King Yahya. Although Riyadh supported
the Zaydi monarchist predecessors (Zaydi Imams) to the Houthi
rebels in the 1962 republican revolution in North Yemen, it now
supports the successors to those it opposed in 1962. This support
is religious and geopolitically based, with the Saleh government
being primarily Sunni (with Wahabbist leanings) and the opposition
being Shia. The fact that the conflict is primarily occurring
in a province on Saudi Arabia's borders explains Riyadh's concerns
with regard to geography. The victory of the north Yemeni forces
began a period that saw increasing repression of forces opposed
to Saleh, with human rights groups documenting torture, displacement
and extrajudicial killings. Since the defeat of the Zaydi Imams
in 1962 by the forerunners of the current Yemeni government, the
northwestern province of Sa'adah has been ignored by the Yemeni
regime, leaving it to founder economically. Over the years this
has naturally caused resentment. By 2004, a full-blown insurgency
in Sa'adah shifted the Yemeni military's interest to this historically
ignored region. This rebellion is known as the Houthi insurgency
because of its leadership by dissident cleric Hussein Badreddin
al-Houthi (rumored to have been killed in US and Saudi airstrikes
in November 2009).
South Yemen was a colony of Britain until
it achieved independence in 1967 after a struggle led by socialist
revolutionaries. After North and South Yemen reunited in 1990,
Saleh refused to grant the former members of the Democratic Republic
of South Yemen power commensurate with their support. This fact
and a desire by the Marxist former leaders of South Yemen for
more progressive social policies led to civil war in 1994. Saleh's
government was backed militarily by Saudi Arabia. The victory
of the north Yemeni forces began a period that saw increasing
repression of forces opposed to Saleh, with human rights groups
documenting torture, displacement and extrajudicial killings.
In 2009, renewed resistance against the Yemeni regime began in
southern Yemen led by leftist-leaning forces. Yemeni military
forces have met this popular uprising with overt and often violent
repression.
On to all this, one must add the group
that calls itself Al Qaida of Yemen (AQY). While it seems unlikely
that this group (if it is truly a terrorist group and not some
kind of black op) is carrying out specific orders of Bin Laden
or one of the dozens of supposed Al Qaida leaders, it is reasonable
to say that its members are inspired by the philosophy and actions
of groups nominally known as Al Qaida. However, as far as the
Yemeni regime is concerned, its existence in Yemen in the minds
of Washington and the rest of the west is quite useful. After
all, if the Pentagon is willing to escalate its low-scale conflict
to a full-fledged war in the name of fighting terrorism, than
Saleh and his military can gain an advantage against the two insurgencies
currently being waged against his regime. By claiming that the
terrorists are either aligned with one or both of the insurgencies
or are at least located in territories controlled by them, Saleh's
regime can direct US airstrikes at those areas of the country.
This will most likely disrupt not only the supposed terror cells,
but will also interrupt the insurgencies. If it is the Yemeni
air force that conducts the raids, it will be with US weaponry
that will soon be on its way. In addition, the likelihood of attacks
against the insurgencies increases should the Yemen government
convince the US to let them run the show (with US supervision).
Naturally, military action on this scale will also kill and wound
civilians, thereby increasing the likelihood of alliances between
the insurgents and AQY, neatly sewing the three elements together
and continuing Saleh's continued rule. I am simultaneously reminded
of Israel's use of US weaponry and funds to subdue the Palestinians
and Washington's deal with Pakistan's Musharraf after 9-11.
Like Afghanistan, Yemen is a very poor
country. It is also somewhat unstable politically, as the above
paragraphs describe. Its proximity to Saudi Arabia raises some
concerns for Washington primarily because of its fear that the
ideas informing the insurgencies might inspire Saudi Arabia's
disenfranchised masses and upset the oil teat America depends
on. Also, like Afghanistan, it can be argued that its best promise
for stability and a decent life for its citizens was when it had
a socialist oriented government-a regime subverted with considerable
help from the United States.
Ron Jacobs is the author of The Way The
Wind Blew: A History of the Weather Underground. His most recent
novel Short Order Frame Up is published by Mainstay Press. He
can be reached at: rjacobs3625@charter.net.
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