AP: Yemen's Shiite Rebels Win Another Stunning Victory

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Tue, 14 Oct 2014 23:38:55 +0200

Yemen's Shiite Rebels Win Another Stunning Victory


SANAA, Yemen - Oct 14, 2014, 3:23 PM ET

By AHMED AL-HAJ and HAMZA HENDAWI Associated Press

 

Associated Press

Shiite rebels who overran Yemen's capital last month won another stunning
victory Tuesday, capturing a key port on the Red Sea in a move that
underlined their apparent intention to create a mini-state in the mostly
chaotic and lawless Arab country.

Control over the city of Hodeida gives the rebels, known as the Houthis and
widely suspected of links to Shiite Iran, an outlet that may be needed to
lend viability to any future entity they create. It also adds considerably
to the troubles of U.S.-backed President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi as he
struggles to hold Yemen together.

The rebel offensive is the latest chaotic chapter for the impoverished
country on the southern tip of the Arabian peninsula.

Yemen has been beset for years by an al-Qaida-led insurgency that has staged
dozens of suicide attacks against military and security personnel. It also
has endured crushing poverty that has bred resentment - and outright
rebellion - that took root in a secessionist movement in its
once-independent southern region.

The advances by the anti-American rebels come in a country that is a
centerpiece in the U.S. campaign against al-Qaida's leaders, hideouts and
camps, often with drones. Its proximity to the vast oilfields of
Washington's Gulf Arab allies also adds to Yemen's strategic value.

Analysts say the Houthis may be building on the momentum gained from their
recent battlefield successes to seize more territory. Apart from Sanaa, they
also have taken over the provinces of Saada and Omran to the north. On
Tuesday, they were in full control of the province of Damar, just south of
Sanaa.

The Houthis captured Hodeida and Damar without any fighting, a fact that
could point to the disarray within Yemen's army and security forces. But it
could also be the result of cooperation between the rebels and forces loyal
to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has been trying to derail the
political transition launched after he was forced to step down in 2011 after
33 years in power.

Army units loyal to Saleh are widely suspected to have aided last month's
Houthi takeover of Sanaa by stepping aside or reaching non-aggression pacts
with the rebels. But this confluence of interests - Saleh's desire to
undermine the political process and to exact revenge on his foes on the one
hand, and the Houthis' territorial ambitions on the other - is likely to be
short-lived, according to analyst Jane Kinninmont.

"One important variable will be the role of Yemen's Gulf neighbors,
especially Saudi Arabia," said Kinninmonth, a Middle East expert from
Chatham House, London's prestigious political research center. "They are
deeply worried by the expansion of the Houthis and may back unlikely forces
who oppose it. The possibility of renewed Saudi military action can't be
ruled out either."

Saudi Arabia, the Sunni powerhouse that borders Yemen, has expressed concern
over the Houthis' battlefield success. The territorial gains give Iran -
Riyadh's traditional foe - a foothold right on the Saudis' doorstep.

Analysts are skeptical the Houthis have the manpower or the expertise to
hold and govern vast areas, although some have speculated the rebels had
intended from the start to capture a sea outlet to ensure the flow of
foreign supplies. Two years ago, Yemeni authorities intercepted two vessels
- allegedly from Iran - carrying weapons that officials said were destined
for the Houthis. The Shiite group denied any link.

The rebels pushed into Hodeida after they had besieged it for days,
according to Yemeni officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because
they were not authorized to talk to the media.

They set up checkpoints and deployed forces at all entry points to Hodeida,
its airport and seaport, and were also in control of several military bases
in the city, 200 kilometers (125 miles) west of Sanaa. They also deployed
armed supporters outside key state installations in the city of about 1
million people. The officials said the rebels also looted weapons from
several military bases in the city.

The officials said the Houthis also raided a seaside residence belonging to
their long-time adversary, Gen. Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, who commanded Yemen's
elite 1st Armored Division and fought against the rebels between 2004 and
2010. They also raided the local headquarters of their sworn enemy, the
Islamist Islah party.

Al-Ahmar, who is linked to Islah, has been on the run since Sanaa fell Sept.
21.

Hodeida is Yemen's second-largest port after Aden on the Arabian Sea. Its
capture places the Houthis a short distance from the strategic southern
entrance of the Red Sea known as Bab al-Mandab. Much of the Gulf region's
oil exports destined for the West sail through that area.

South of Sanaa, the Houthis took Damar province and its provincial capital,
also called Damar. The officials said soldiers and police vanished from the
streets of the provincial capital, replaced by armed Houthis.

The capture of Damar appeared to have been aided by the local al-Maqadshah
tribe, known to be loyal to Saleh, who retains vast influence among tribes
and the military.

The Houthis' campaign began in the summer when they defeated militant
Islamists holding several small pockets in Saada. In July, they captured
Omran, which lies to the north of Sanaa, before they laid siege to the
capital and overran it.

Critics of the rebels say they have modeled their movement after the
Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which wields power in southern and
eastern Lebanon, as well as in the densely populated suburbs south of
Beirut.

The Yemeni rebels subscribe to the Shiite Zaydi sect and take their name
from the Houthi family that founded the movement in Saada and claims to be
descended from the Prophet Muhammad.

Also on Tuesday, tens of thousands of people demonstrated in the southern
port of Aden, calling for secession from the north of the country.

Southern Yemen was an independent nation until it was unified with the north
in 1990. A movement to break away from the union was ruthlessly crushed in
1994 by Saleh.

On Tuesday, the protesters in Aden burned images of Saleh and Abdul-Malik
al-Houthi, the movement's leader.

 





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