Thu, Nov 7, 2019
Saudi-backed Yemeni government and separatists sign power-sharing agreement
MENASource
by
MENASource
Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Yemeni President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi, and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the Riyadh signing ceremony for the November 5 power-sharing agreement between the UN-recognized Yemeni government and southern separatists. Saudi Press Agency
On Tuesday, November 5, the Hadi government signed a power-sharing agreement with southern separatists in Riyadh. The separatists and Hadi-led Yemen Government are backed by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, specifically by the United Arab Emirates. Infighting between them further fractured the civil war in August when the separatists seized Aden from Saudi-led forces. It is unclear what is stipulated in the agreement and what its impact may have on the Houthi forces the Saudi-led coalition has been fighting over the past several years.
Atlantic Council experts react
Kirsten Fontenrose is Director of the Scowcroft Middle East Security Initiative at the Atlantic Council
This agreement gets us back to baseline. Now the focus can return to negotiating a political way forward for Yemen. The value in this agreement is the precedent it sets for productive negotiation and compromise. Let’s hope all parties in the conflict are willing to adopt this model.
Nabeel Khoury is nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.
This is a partial agreement right now, concerning mainly the western part of southern Yemen. The main difficulty will be the merger of two military forces that don’t necessarily want to be united.
If the intentions of the Arab coalition are genuine, i.e. to help Yemen find peace, then many tough diplomatic challenges lie ahead. They have to unite the south on the basis of peace with the Houthis, and the latter have not been consulted yet. If the intention is to continue to dominate the south by the Saudis and the Emiratis, then some very tough battles lie ahead within the south and the north.
Frederic C. Hof is a distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.
Any intra-Yemeni power-sharing agreement that reduces the number of aggrieved parties is welcome. Good faith implementation, however, is everything. This humanitarian abomination must end, and it must end on strictly Yemeni terms if agreements such as the one just announced are to be sustained.
Further Reading
Wed, Oct 16, 2019
While Saudi Arabia came into Yemen very sensitive of the regional Iranian challenge and Houthi threat, its war strategy and foreign policy lacks any awareness of the looming and ongoing environmental and humanitarian war that will affect the overall outcome of the peace in Yemen.
MENASource
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Hadi Fathallah
Fri, Mar 15, 2019
The passage of Senate Joint Resolution 7 is a fresh rebuke for the Trump administration, that its support for the Saudi-led war on Yemen is unauthorized, illegal, and an immoral assault on the Yemeni people.
MENASource
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Nabeel Khoury
Tue, Nov 20, 2018
With the high and ever-growing civilian death toll of Yemen’s civil war, the acute need for peace contrasts sharply with the sparse hopes of a peace process. After months of delays, the government and rebel forces announced on November 19 their intentions to temporarily freeze military operations and convene for negotiations in Sweden. The success of these talks will depend on whether the parties can effectively apply the lessons of past peace talks to structure a new peace process for Yemen.
MENASource
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Jessica Levy and Paul R. Williams
On Tuesday, November 5, the Hadi government signed a power-sharing agreement with southern separatists in Riyadh. The separatists and Hadi-led Yemen Government are backed by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, specifically by the United Arab Emirates. Infighting between them further fractured the civil war in August when the separatists seized Aden from Saudi-led forces. It […]
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