http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle-east/speculation-grows-on-yemeni-presidents-condition/2011/06/04/AGpN9xIH_print.html

 


Yemeni crowds celebrate after president transfers power, flies to Saudi Arabia


By Ernesto Londono 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/ernesto-londono/2011/03/02/ABPyvmP_page.html>  
and Sudarsan Raghavan 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/sudarsan-raghavan/2011/02/22/ABkvITI_page.html> 
, Published: June 4 | Updated: Sunday, June 5, 6:20 AM


CAIRO — Hours after the Yemen’s president flew to Saudi Arabia for treatment of 
wounds sustained in a rocket attack, thousands of demonstrators flocked to the 
streets of the capital Sunday to celebrate what they billed as the latest 
ouster of an Arab autocrat.

“The Yemeni people have been born again,” cried out Fatima Ahmad, 72, who was 
among those who walked to Change Square in Sanaa to celebrate the president’s 
departure. 

Thousands waved flags, painted their faces with the colors of the national flag 
and exchanged congratulations in a capital that had become a battleground in 
recent days 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/violence-in-yemen-escalates/2011/06/03/AGIud3HH_gallery.html>
 .

“We have deported Ali,” some chanted. “The people have toppled the regime.” 

Saleh transferred power temporarily to his vice president, Abed Rabbo Mansour 
Hadi, after boarding a flight to Saudi Arabia late Saturday. He was wounded 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/yemens-presidential-palace-struck-as-fighting-intensifies/2011/06/03/AG5hlyHH_story.html>
  in a rocket attack on the presidential palace Friday afternoon. 

The vice president on Sunday met with U.S. Ambassador Gerald M. Feierstein, 
Yemen’s news agency reported. The two discussed steps required to maintain a 
cease-fire between government forces and tribal militias. They also spoke about 
Yemen’s the political opposition, known as the Joint Meeting Parties. 

Yemeni officials have not called Saleh’s departure an abdication from power, 
but analysts say the longtime leader 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/yemen-timeline-looking-back-at-salehs-rule/2011/06/03/AGpeqHIH_blog.html>
 , who had been a key U.S. ally on the fight against al-Qaeda, is unlikely to 
return as president.

Despite the jubilation in Sanaa, bloodshed continued in the southern city of 
Taiz, where gunmen attacked the presidential palace, killing four soldiers, the 
Associated Press reported. 

Saleh’s sudden departure comes as the country is on the verge of civil war and 
economic collapse, with a violent power struggle among rival tribesmen underway 
and no clear plan for a transition of power if Saleh were to permanently 
surrender office.

For months, Saleh had resisted intense pressure from within Yemen, the Middle 
East’s poorest nation, and from neighboring countries and the United States to 
step down. With an active al-Qaeda branch in Yemen — one ambitious enough to 
claim the mantle of Osama bin Laden in the near future — Saleh’s departure 
could pose one of the most significant policy challenges for the Obama 
administration in the months ahead.

A Pentagon spokesman acknowledged late Saturday that the crisis in Yemen was 
already affecting U.S. efforts to fight terrorism.

“The current protracted political issues are having an adverse impact on the 
security situation in Yemen,” said Col. David Lapan, a Pentagon spokesman, and 
the United States is “continuing to review and assess all aspects of our 
security assistance.”

But he indicated that Washington was already looking beyond Saleh’s rule. “Our 
shared interest with the Yemeni government in defeating al-Qaeda goes beyond 
one person,” Lapan said. The U.S. military has an unspecified number of 
counterterrorism trainers in Yemen, who the Pentagon has said remain in the 
country, although the civil unrest had affected their work.

In Sanaa, the Yemeni capital, an official in the president’s office confirmed 
that Saleh had left the country for Saudi Arabia and said that his vice 
president had taken over his duties. The White House said President Obama’s 
counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, spoke with Hadi by telephone Saturday 
but provided no details, news services reported.

The AP quoted the state-run Saudi Press Agency as reporting that Saleh had 
arrived in the country. 

Most of Saleh’s family accompanied him on the flight to Saudi Arabia, AP 
reported, citing a government official. But Saleh’s son Ahmed, whom he was 
grooming as a successor, was believed to have stayed behind, AP reported.

Christopher Boucek, an analyst with the Carnegie Endowment for International 
Peace, said violence in Yemen could become even more intense, given the 
animosity between Saleh’s supporters and those of the Ahmar clan, whose 
tribesmen have spearheaded the effort to topple Saleh.

“His son and nephews may try to finish off the Ahmars,” Boucek said. “The 
regime’s power lies in the military and security branches, the guys who have 
been fighting, and where do they go? They may think their only option is to 
fight.”

Gregory Johnsen, a Yemen expert at Princeton University, agreed that the next 
steps are unclear. “What happens with his family? Do his forces crumble? Who 
steps in to fill any vacuum?’’ Johnsen said. “At this point, there is no road 
map or someone very obvious waiting in the wings.”

Saleh’s departure fuel­ed speculation that the injuries he suffered in Friday’s 
midday attack — when a rocket or mortar shell struck a mosque inside the 
sprawling compound where Saleh and other senior officials were praying — could 
have been more serious than the palace has suggested. 

Yemen’s state news agency reported Saturday that the country’s prime minister, 
Ali Mujawar, and the speaker of parliament, Yahya al-Raee, were among a handful 
of dignitaries flown to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment. Saleh was wounded 
in the head and was being treated at the Defense Ministry hospital, a Yemeni 
official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the 
president’s medical state.

A few hours after the attack, Saleh delivered an audio address, but his voice 
seemed slow and slurred. He blamed the attack on the Ahmar family.

Afterward, government loyalists attacked the compound of Hamid al-Ahmar, a 
wealthy tycoon who has long opposed Saleh. That attack killed 19 people and 
wounded 40, tribal leaders said.

The clashes prompted Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah to broker a temporary 
cease-fire between government forces and the Ahmar tribesmen. The kingdom, 
which neighbors Yemen, has long been worried about its poorer neighbor’s 
political instability and its abundance of al-Qaeda operatives, many of whom 
have links to Saudi Arabia. For decades, Saudi Arabia has played a role in 
shaping Yemen’s politics, and the kingdom could play a significant role in 
shaping Yemen’s future.

As evidence of the Saudi influence, the capital, Sanaa, and other parts of the 
country remained quiet and peaceful Saturday — after two weeks of mayhem.

Saleh’s ability to rule Yemen — which he has controlled for 33 years — has 
diminished significantly since a populist nonviolent uprising, inspired by 
similar rebellions in Tunisia and Egypt, was launched in January. Islamic 
militants, including al-Qaeda operatives, have taken control over some areas in 
Yemen’s restive south as government forces have left their positions. The 
economy is spiraling.

Joint U.S.-Yemen operations have ground to a halt in recent months as Saleh’s 
focus shifted to maintaining control of the country.

U.S. intelligence and counterterrorism officials have testified repeatedly that 
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, as the Yemen branch is known, represents the 
most immediate threat to American interests. AQAP has been linked to a series 
of failed plots, including the attempted bombing of a Detroit-bound airliner on 
Christmas in 2009 and the shipment of printer cartridges packed with explosives 
to the United States.

The main worry among U.S. counterterrorism experts is that Saleh’s departure 
could set off a prolonged power struggle involving the few functioning 
institutions in Yemen: its military, intelligence services and tribal 
leadership. Those institutions, led by Saleh relatives and loyalists, were 
struggling to contain AQAP even before the dictator faced mounting protests 
against his rule.

“Once he steps out of Yemen, there’s a major question as to whether he ever 
returns,” said Juan Zarate, who was counterterrorism adviser to former 
president George W. Bush. “If in fact he leaves, I’m very pessimistic as to 
what follows. I think it turns very messy very quickly, creating all sorts of 
breathing space for [al-Qaeda] and problems for the United States.’’

“It’s a very dangerous elixir in Yemen,” Zarate added. Given the demise of bin 
Laden and other al-Qaeda figures, AQAP is positioned “to emerge as . . . the 
strategic driver for the jihadi movement.”

Johnsen said the United States might have to scramble to plan for the loss of 
an ally — albeit an inconsistent one — against AQAP.

“The U.S., until very recently, didn’t put much focus on what comes after 
Saleh,” he said. “I’m not sure they have a good plan for what comes next — 
assuming anyone can know what comes next.”

 



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