The National - News

BRITISH AMBASSADOR: MISSILES MUST NOT DERAIL PUSH FOR PEACE EXCLUSIVE

New envoy to Yemen says role of Iran in the war is to ‘get at the Saudis’ and Hezbollah is involved on the ground

- DAMIEN McELROY London Continued on page 2

Only a few weeks into the job as British ambassador to Yemen, Michael Aron was in Abu Dhabi meeting leaders and businessme­n from the war-torn state when he received an abrupt notificati­on of the challenge facing the region.

Houthi rebels had targeted Riyadh with an Iranian missile that detonated in a residentia­l neighbourh­ood, killing an unsuspecti­ng Egyptian resident. Instantly Mr Aron’s phone was alive with developmen­ts. “The team WhatsApp on the ground was filled with messages within minutes, it was a very audible bang and quite alarming,” Mr Aron told The National.

The series of missile attacks on Yemen’s northern neighbour is one developmen­t in recent months that has brought the situation to a critical juncture. The others being the death of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh and the appointmen­t of Mr Aron’s fellow Briton Martin Griffiths as the UN secretary general’s envoy for peace talks.

Houthi rebels fired the missiles but they were supplied from elsewhere. Establishi­ng the missiles as Iranian made has shown up the depth of Tehran’s interventi­on on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula. Allying with Abdul-Malik al Houthi’s followers, Iran’s regional campaign targeting Saudi Arabia has been one of unrelentin­g expansion.

“Missiles aimed at Riyadh – and shorter range attacks on Jizzan – and the attacks on the Red Sea are all demonstrat­ions by the Houthis that ‘we’re here, we’re not going anywhere, we have backers, we can get weapons’,” Mr Aron, a former ambassador in Kuwait, Iraq, Libya and Sudan observed. “We see [also] the issue around the provenance of the missiles, which according to an independen­t panel of experts come from Iran and we would certainly agree with that, as a demonstrat­ion of Iranian interferen­ce.

“There is a whole element around the role of Iran that has grown significan­tly over the past 10 years in Yemen. It’s part of a broader Iranian regional effort – Yemen is not a strategic interest of Iran – it’s a means of getting at the Saudis.”

With a fresh set of eyes to the conflict, Mr Aron makes a strong case that a resolution must revolve around those regional security concerns. “We think the Saudis have every right to say that it should stop,”

he said. “Over the course of the war, the Houthis as Hezbollah dynamic has grown. “There is clearly Hezbollah presence on the ground and Abdul Malik Al Houthi sees Hezbollah as a role model.”

After a set of visits to Sanaa by senior diplomats and Mr Griffiths, Mr Aron believes conditions are ripening for a diplomatic breakthrou­gh.

He foresees a prospect of success for a three-phased peace process.

Following the assassinat­ion of Mr Saleh, the former ruling party, the General People’s Congress, is reassessin­g its role and the Houthi leadership is no longer as certain in its outlook.

“The Houthis are finding it pretty tough. The impression from the various ambassador­s that went in seemed to think it looked pretty fragile in Sanaa,” he said.

Acceptance of the new envoy, a veteran of peace-brokering initiative­s in Asia, Africa and the Middle East, has been universal. Mr Aron revealed that Mr Griffiths had already been involved in informal talks since last year. “The Houthis seem to accept him, the Saudis accept him, the government of Yemen accepts him,” he said. “Broad acceptance plus three years of war sets the mood.”

Mr Aron said initial confidence-building measures, such as reopening Sanaa airport and starting to pay civil servant salaries through the revitalise­d central bank, can kick-start Mr Griffiths’ efforts. Then, he said, the fighting must be brought to a standstill before a third phase of inclusive political dialogue to restore the state.

There are already signs that some of the Yemen logjam is breaking down.

A donor conference in Geneva earlier this week garnered US$2 billion (Dh7.34bn) of the overall $3bn appeal. Half came from Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates and $240 million from Britain.

A partnershi­p between Mr Griffiths and Lise Grande, the UN humanitari­an co-ordinator, can now work to bring relief and deliver political benefits.

To uphold the UN arms embargo, a verificati­on and inspection mechanism (Unvim) has been upgraded in Djibouti to screen cargo destined for Yemen.

Mohammed Al Jabir, the Saudi Ambassador to Yemen, separately said on Thursday that Unvim inspector numbers would rise to 10 from four and monitors increase to 16 from six. All would benefit from substantia­lly improved technology.

With the increase in resources, prevention efforts in the face of a cholera outbreak must now show dramatic improvemen­ts. “There is a massive expectatio­n,” Mr Aron said. “The feeling is that Yemen can’t wait.”

In parallel, a strong diplomatic commitment to the security concerns of the region is being led by the so-called Quad countries – US, UK, UAE and Saudi, Mr Aron said. “We are not neutral in this. We support the coalition as we supported the initial action to prevent the Houthis taking over the country,” he said. “And we now think the time has come for a political solution.

“The Saudis and Emirates need the reassuranc­e that they have our strong support and that we are there to help them secure their reasonable security objectives.”

 ?? AFP ?? Michael Aron, the new UK ambassador to Yemen, says the UK supported initial action to prevent the Houthis taking over the country
AFP Michael Aron, the new UK ambassador to Yemen, says the UK supported initial action to prevent the Houthis taking over the country

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