Yemen Falling

Posted By Rick Moran On April 25, 2011 

A potential agreement
<http://m.apnews.com/ap/db_16026/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=FhRZEjLJ>
brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council between Yemen's embattled President
Ali Abdullah Saleh and his opponents was rejected on Sunday pending
substantial alterations to the pact. Now, with chances for a peaceful
resolution to the crisis fading, fears are growing in Washington and Saudi
Arabia that Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) will have even more
freedom to carry out attacks against America and its allies. Perhaps most
troubling of all, a quick end to the chaos may result in a government that
is unwilling to cooperate with the United States in its battle against AQAP
terrorists, who are based in Yemen's northern provinces bordering Saudi
Arabia.

The putative agreement negotiated by the Saudi-led GCC would have required
Saleh to leave office in 30 days, transferring power to his Vice President
in exchange for the legislature passing a measure that would have given the
president and his family immunity from prosecution.

But the opposition - the Joint Meeting Parties or JMP - while agreeing in
principle to the outline of the deal, has rejected some of the details. The
agreement calls for protestors to cease their demonstrations immediately -
something the opposition parties sensibly protest is beyond their power.
There is a large and influential youth movement that dominates the Yemeni
streets and they say
<http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2067241,00.html> they won't
leave until Saleh is out of power. "This is the most productive solution for
the Joint Meeting Parties, not for us," says Adel al-Surabi, a leader of
Sanaa's opposition youth movement.

But the level of distrust for Saleh's motives is so high that it has
resulted in other elements of the pact being rejected, including a
stipulation that the parliament, dominated by Saleh's party, would have the
option of accepting or rejecting the president's resignation. The bottom
line is that no one can be sure that Saleh won't find a way to finagle his
way into somehow staying in power. Thus, the death knell for the GCC
agreement.

This is bad news for Saudi Arabia who greatly fears the unrest on its
border. Last month, the Kingdom announced the arrest
<http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2010/03/26/the_yemeni_threat_in_saud
ia_arabia> of more than 100 suspected terrorists, many of them from Yemen.
The terrorists were plotting to blow up key oil installations and other
sensitive targets. The arrests were made after an investigation that grew
out of a shoot out  <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8305919.stm> on the Yemen
border where two militants were killed. According to information released by
the Saudis, several of the terror suspects were in email contact with AQAP,
and were in the initial stages of plotting to attack economic and security
targets.

The Saudis have a direct stake in finding a peaceful outcome in Yemen. But
America's interest in guiding Yemen out of this morass toward stability is
no less urgent. For 15 years, President Saleh has successfully parlayed
America's desire to fight terrorism into aid for his regime and a hammer
that he could use against the opposition. Many in Yemen wonder just how
serious the al-Qaeda threat truly is, as Saleh has used terrorism as an
excuse to undertake several crackdowns on those wanting democratic change.
And while Saleh is considered a strong ally in the war on terror, a debate
has raged in Washington for years about his real value, given his autocratic
nature and his less than persistent efforts to attack the terrorists
ensconced in the mountainous Northern provinces.

Nevertheless, Saleh has allowed our drones to attack al-Qaeda targets, given
permission for special forces to train Yemeni counterterrorism units, and
gone over to the offense in the battle against AQAP. All of this is now by
the boards as Saleh has retrenched and withdrawn his army and the
counterterror forces, concentrating them around the capitol of Sanaa. He has
also forbidden drone strikes. This has given AQAP the opening it needed and
the terrorists have now moved into towns and villages, filling the void left
by the army and police.

AQAP has reportedly taken over
<http://narrabyee-e.blogspot.com/2011/03/islamic-state-for-al-qaeda-and-saad
a.html>  a town
<http://www.newsrealblog.com/2011/03/27/al-qaeda-exploits-the-yemen-crisis/>
in Abyan province and declared an "Islamic Emirate." Most observers scoff at
the idea of an independent al-Qaeda emirate, but the AQAP move demonstrates
that the chaos roiling the streets and provinces of Yemen is benefiting the
terrorists as Saleh's control of the country continues to shrink to Sanaa
and a few other urban centers.

In addition to AQAP in the north, there is another insurgency in the
formerly independent south. Separatists there have also taken advantage of
the chaos to push into areas formerly controlled by the central government.
It would appear that the longer the political crisis goes on in Sanaa, the
more advantageous the situation will be for AQAP and the Iranian backed
Houthi rebellion in the north, and the separatists in the south.

What has the Obama administration done about the situation? As in Egypt,
they have abandoned a long-time ally, while pushing for "reforms." On April
5, the White House released a statement condemning the violence in Yemen and
calling on President Saleh to step down. Privately, they were hoping that
Saleh could broker a deal that would have him remain in power in some
capacity. Richard Fontaine of
<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/12/twilight_of_a_strongman?pa
ge=full> Foreign Policy Magazine believes that a "best case scenario" would
see a situation where "Yemeni politics could reach a more stable footing
and, through a new openness, undermine the appeal of extremism." Fontaine
also hopes that "Washington might pursue a broad relationship that extends
beyond security cooperation and aid to active support of a budding
democracy." Out of this relationship might be forged a new counterterrorism
dynamic based on a more stable foundation than the mercurial Saleh.

But the collapse of the GCC agreement makes that scenario a remote
possibility. Hundreds of thousands of protestors were in the street on
Sunday calling for Saleh's immediate departure. Meanwhile, the GCC announced
that it would conduct no more negotiations; the two sides must accept the
agreed framework.

Saleh may not have a choice in a few days. The army is far from loyal and
the possibility of civil war grows by the hour. A Sanaa-based political
analyst <http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2067241,00.html> ,
Abdel Ghani, believes "If this is the end, then Yemen is facing a major
crisis. After all these negotiations we've exhausted all of our potential
mediators. If we don't have a solution now, then violence will be the next
logical step."

And only Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula will be the beneficiary.

Rick Moran is Blog Editor of  <http://www.americanthinker.com/> The American
Thinker, and Chicago Editor of  <http://pajamasmedia.com/> PJ Media. His
personal blog is  <http://rightwingnuthouse.com/> Right Wing Nuthouse.

 

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article: http://frontpagemag.com/2011/04/25/yemen-falling/

 



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