What’s REALLY Going On In Yemen

Washington’s Blog

What the Heck Is This War About?

Confused about the war in Yemen?

Here’s what’s really going on …

Yemen – previously called “Aden” – has one of the oldest civilizations in the Middle East.  But it has been racked with violence for a long time.  

In the 1960s, a pro-Arab nationalist faction clashed with the British – who wanted Yemen to become a Western-controlled natural resource hub – and devolved into brutal fighting, with both sides using terrorism.

Yemen’s first president – Saleh – was in power from 1990 to 2012.  The U.S supported Saleh, but Saleh was a double-dealing scoundrel.

The Arab Spring protests ousted Saleh, and America helped broker immunity for prosecution in return for his leaving office.

Saleh was corrupt and tyrannical.   As the Telegraph reports:

For years, the Americans saw President Ali Abdullah Saleh as a key ally in the fight against al-Qaeda. He allowed his air bases to be used by US drones to strike at the movement’s operatives, and gladly received Western aid in development cash and arms supplies.

Yet according to claims in a United Nations report last month, one of the first things Mr Saleh did when his three-decade rule was threatened by the 2011 Arab Spring was strike a secret deal to give an entire southern province to al-Qaeda. The more he could portray Yemen as falling into militant hands, he calculated, the more the West want to keep him in office at all costs.

The U.S. brokered Saleh’s replacement by Yemen’s current president, Hadi. Hadi was a long-time high-level assistant to Hadi.

The presidential election “ballot” had only one choice … Hadi:

The opposition which took over the country – the Houthis (also called “Zaydis”) – are violent fundamentalist idiots. Yes, they are closer to Shiites (like the majority in Iran) than Sunnis (like Saudi Arabia).  But they are virtually indistinguishable from Sunni fundamentalist terrorists in their behavior:

Although a Shi’a group, Zaydi theological differences with Sunnis are few ….

Hadi is such a traitor to his own Yemeni people that he is calling for a foreign power – Saudi Arabia – to keep bombing Yemen until his opposition is defeated.

But – here’s the kicker – guess who is behind the Houthi revolt that led to the taking over Yemen from Hadi?

If you guessed Iran, you’re wrong.

Its deposed president Saleh!  Indeed, the reason that the Houthis were able to take over the country so quickly is that many of the troops and police are still loyal to Saleh.  So – at Saleh’s instruction – while the Houtis advanced, the soldiers and guards simply walked away from their posts when Saleh told them to scram.

Bottom line: There are no saints in this conflict …

Many are calling this a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran. But it’s not.

Initially, Saudi Arabia is directly bombing Yemen. It’s not doing so through a  proxy.

Moreover, while Iran is sending the Houthis some money, this is really a power struggle between two corrupt idiots:   Saleh and Hadi.  Iran is not very involved.

http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2015/03/whats-really-going-yemen.html

4 thoughts on “What’s REALLY Going On In Yemen

  1. “Hadi was a long-time high-level assistant to Hadi.”

    I’m confused. So Hadi was a long-time high-level assistant to himself? Is this a typo or am I reading this wrong?

    “Hadi is such a traitor to his own Yemeni people that he is calling for a foreign power – Saudi Arabia – to keep bombing Yemen until his opposition is defeated.”

    Gee…It sounds like Barry calling Israel and China (TWO foreign powers) to keep attacking us until the opposition in our country is defeated.

  2. “…this is really a power struggle between two corrupt idiots: Saleh and Hadi. Iran is not very involved.”

    But they will continue to be blamed, regardless.

    By the jews (mainly by proxy, though).

  3. I think that Americans have been taught a bad habit if they even give a shite about Yemen.

    We’ve grown so accustomed to our insurgent government using our military to pry its way into another country’s business, that countries we might have never heard of in the past are now headlines here.

    Yemen might be part of a geography lesson, but outside of that, I don’t think it matters to us at all.

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