Los Angeles Times

Saudis isolated as war drags on in Yemen

The kingdom’s coalition is splintered and one-time allies are fighting each other.

- By Nabih Bulos and David S. Cloud Times staff writers Bulos reported from Beirut and Cloud from Washington.

BEIRUT — Saudi Arabia called its military push against rebels in Yemen two names: “Operation Storm of Decisivene­ss” (it wasn’t) and “Operation Restoring Hope” (it hasn’t).

More than four years after the Saudis and other nations sought to help restore government control by defeating the Houthi rebels, the war in Yemen has left almost 100,000 people dead, brought near-famine to millions and made the country’s name synonymous with misery. Aid workers use words such as “biblical” and “epidemic” to describe conditions.

The country seems so hopeless to many nations that even the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia’s closest partner in the coalition it leads in Yemen, recently announced it was withdrawin­g most of its troops in hopes of strengthen­ing a peace initiative.

Instead, one of the coalition’s Yemeni factions on Saturday snatched the port of the southern city of Aden, the temporary seat of power of the U.N.-recognized Yemeni government and a bastion of UAE influence. It was part of a days-long offensive that had already overrun the government’s bases and the presidenti­al palace, forcing Riyadh to respond with what it called “military action” on one of its putative allies to stop the advance.

With the coalition splintered, Saudi Arabia remains largely alone, calling for ever greater U.S. arms support to pursue an increasing­ly unpopular war where victory seems remote, if not impossible.

“The war was never winnable in the first place,” said Farea Muslimi, head of the Sanaa Center for Strategic Studies, a think tank based in Yemen’s capital, in a phone interview. “With the second-most-important partner gone, even this illusion is no longer there.”

There’s little sign, neverthele­ss, that the Saudis or the Houthis, a politico-religious group, are ready to quit the fight.

“It’s high time that the Houthis . . . put an end to their illegitima­te occupation of the centers of powers in Yemen,” said Saudi Ambassador to the United Nations Abdallah Mouallimi in a July news conference in New York.

The uprising tied to the Arab Spring of 2011 that opposed Yemen’s authoritar­ian government was aimed at ushering in a more inclusive state and disposing of problems such as corruption and food shortages. In 2014, the Houthis, who have received backing from Iran, were fed up with the slow path to change and blitzed into the Yemeni capital, Sana.

Saudi Arabia launched its interventi­on in March 2015. It was meant to signal a new era of muscular foreign policy, especially in Saudi Arabia’s longtime clash with Iran.

Under the stewardshi­p of Prince Mohammed bin Salman, then the new defense minister (he was appointed crown prince in 2017), Saudi Arabia assembled a coalition of nine countries in the region and Africa to oust the Houthis and reinstate the government of former Yemeni President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi.

It unleashed an intense air campaign, along with a crippling sea blockade that left perenniall­y impoverish­ed Yemen on the brink of famine. The UAE led the ground offensive with a force cobbled together from mercenarie­s, Sudanese janjaweed fighters and Yemeni militias who hated each other a bit less than they hated the Houthis. The U.S., meanwhile, provided intelligen­ce and logistics support, including in-flight refueling; it also fast-tracked weapons deliveries to both Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

The interventi­on was meant to be over in a few months, but many analysts say the conflict has become a quagmire reminiscen­t of Vietnam. The Houthis still hold much of the country’s western provinces, including Sana, and the highlands near the Saudi border as well as a portion of Yemen’s Red Sea coast.

The human cost of the war has been devastatin­g, with millions of people displaced and in need of assistance. Aid agencies and others say 24.1 million people out of a population of 28 million require some form of help, with about 10 million suffering from extreme hunger. Nearly 18 million people lack adequate access to water, and more than 19 million people lack proper access to healthcare, aid workers say.

The United Nations concluded in a February report that millions more Yemenis are “sicker, hungrier, and more vulnerable than a year ago.” Yemen suffered the world’s largest cholera outbreak in 2017; more than a million cases were reported, said the World Health Organizati­on.

Mounting casualties in the country became a cudgel for human rights campaigner­s. Even U.S. lawmakers, usually obsequious with their Saudi and Emirati allies, joined in the outcry, especially after the killing last year of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, which is widely viewed by internatio­nal officials to have been commanded by the crown prince.

“I think that all of my colleagues can agree that the United States and Saudi Arabia need a course correction,” said Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The UAE’s so-called strategic redeployme­nt last month seemed an acknowledg­ment of the stalemate between the two sides.

The Saudi coalition had accused the Houthis of using the Red Sea port of Hudaydah to control aid flows and smuggle weapons, and had clamored to take it. But widespread internatio­nal pressure proved strong; an offensive set for last year was canceled, and a cease-fire in Hudaydah became the centerpiec­e of U.N.-brokered peace talks held in December in Stockholm.

Emirati officials insisted in interviews that their drawdown was an extension of the Stockholm plan, despite its tortuous implementa­tion. Houthi forces began withdrawin­g from Hudaydah in May.

Saudi Arabia’s air campaign has also been reduced in intensity from an average of 19 daily strikes in 2015 to nine in 2018, according to the Yemen Data Project, which compiles strike data on the war.

Joint U.S.-UAE counterter­rorism operations will be unaffected, officials said. Both countries have deployed special forces teams in Yemen against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which the U.S. considers the terrorist group’s most effective branch.

 ?? Hani Mohammed Associated Press ?? THE BODY of a child is removed from the rubble of a house destroyed in Sana, Yemen, by Saudi airstrikes. The human cost of the war has been devastatin­g, with millions also displaced and in need of assistance.
Hani Mohammed Associated Press THE BODY of a child is removed from the rubble of a house destroyed in Sana, Yemen, by Saudi airstrikes. The human cost of the war has been devastatin­g, with millions also displaced and in need of assistance.

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