Gulf News

Greater US involvemen­t in Yemen is needed

Further action to degrade Al Houthi missile capabiliti­es, both to protect internatio­nal shipping and the Saudi-Yemeni border, seems a necessity

- Special to Gulf News

n a recent interview to Vanity Fair magazine, US President Barack Obama acknowledg­ed that he grapples with the question “what might I have done differentl­y along the course of the last five, six years” in Syria in the “knowledge that you have hundreds of thousands of people who have been killed, millions who have been displaced.” As far as Syria is concerned, such contemplat­ion is too late. The damage has been done, and Syria and the wider region will not recover for decades.

There is, however, one theatre of conflict in the region where the US can still take action now in order to avert a calamity such as Syria. That is Yemen. If left as is, Yemen has the potential to become another Syria, and a likely prospect in complete state disintegra­tion, increased sectariani­sm, and in response, hardened extremism. The conflict has already resulted in 10,000 dead, including 4,000 civilians. The United Nations estimates that 80 per cent of the Yemeni population is in need of humanitari­an assistance. In the city of Taiz, 200,000 people are besieged by the Al Houthi alliance with humanitari­an aid cut off, and 37 of the city’s 40 hospitals have been forced to close due to bombardmen­t. Taiz is Yemen’s Aleppo.

Moreover, following the breakdown of peace talks in Kuwait in August, the conflict has only intensifie­d. On October 8, a missile strike by the coalition forces, which a coalition spokespers­on clarified was the result of wrong intelligen­ce provided by the Yemeni army, hit a condolence service hall in the capital Sana’a killing 140 people and injuring more than 500. It was the deadliest single strike as far as civilian casualties are concerned so far.

At the same time, the Al Houthi alliance launched missile strikes against internatio­nal shipping, hitting the UAE vessel HSV-2 Swift on October 1 followed by an attempted strike against the American destroyer USS Mason on October 9. Additional ballistic missile strikes were carried out against Saudi Arabia, including one against the city of Taif more than 500km from the Saudi-Yemeni border.

These recent incidents point to a sharp escalation of the conflict. And unless stopped, Yemen faces the prospect of a downward spiral into complete chaos. With the example of Syria in front of us, the implicatio­ns of this should be clear. The strengthen­ing of extremist groups like Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and Daesh (the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) feeding off a dislliusio­ned generation of Yemeni youth, a severe humanitari­an crisis along with increased refugee flows further impacting the fragility of the wider Middle East and beyond, and the further decay of state institutio­ns as power is dispersed between militia and non-state actors are likely to make Yemen ungovernab­le. The parallels to Syria are evident. Under such circumstan­ces, the only plausible alternativ­e is that the US increases its involvemen­t in the Yemen conflict with the clearly stated objective of bringing about a political solution. Unlike Syria, a political process for Yemen has already been outlined in UN Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 2216, including a national unity government which includes Al Houthis.

Viable process

US Secretary of State John Kerry’s revised plan under which militia disarmamen­t would occur alongside the establishm­ent of a coalition government represents a viable process that all parties to the conflict should accept. Saudi Arabia and the other GCC states have already voiced their clear support for this arrangemen­t.

The US and British call for an unconditio­nal ceasefire is a step in the right direction. But more concrete US leadership is needed. An increased US role should include the expansion of its involvemen­t in the command and control operation of the Saudi-led coalition to enable effective targeting and, as much as possible, prevent civilian casualties.

The US should further be ready to respond forcefully to Al Houthi provocatio­ns such as it did recently by destroying radar sites in response to the missile attacks on its ships. Further action to degrade Al Houthi missile capabiliti­es both to protect internatio­nal shipping and the SaudiYemen­i border might be needed. Only US action can give the political process under a UN mandate a realistic chance.

The Yemen conflict must be brought to an end before a second Syria scenario emerges. In Yemen, Obama still has the opportunit­y to bring about a cessation of hostilitie­s before things unravel further. This, however, will need greater US political and even military involvemen­t. Unlike Syria, where Obama’s argument has always been that military action in the absence of a clear political alternativ­e will be ineffectiv­e or even counterpro­ductive, a political alternativ­e in Yemen exists because of the previous National Dialogue Process and the steps outlined in UNSCR 2216.

Unless the US begins to act to enforce such internatio­nal resolution­s, the envisioned process will remain only on paper with no end to the continued suffering of the Yemenis.

Dr. Christian Koch is director of the Gulf Research Centre Foundation, Geneva.

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