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 Starving and Broke:  Yemen's Renewed 'War on Terror'  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 30, 2012 
 Yemeni forces continue to push against Islamic fighters affiliated with 
	al-Qaeda. Their major victories come on the heels of the inauguration of Abd 
	Rabbuh Mansur al-Hadi, who is now entrusted with the task of leading the 
	country through a peaceful transition. A new constitution and presidential 
	elections are expected by 2014.
 Faced with the most strenuous of 
	circumstances – the unyielding ruling family, the US-lead war on al-Qaeda, 
	sectarian tension, unsettled political divides between south and north, and 
	unforgiving poverty - the youth of Yemen successfully managed to introduce a 
	hopeful chapter to an otherwise gloomy modern history. While they should be 
	proud of this, they must also remain wary of the challenges awaiting them in 
	the next two years.
 
 The next phase will be decisive one for Yemen. 
	It will either take the country a step forward towards real reforms - which 
	should resolve some of the country’s most protracted regional strife and 
	confront the rampant inequality – or leave it to suffer a worse fate than 
	that under Saleh’s family. The early signs are worrisome, compelling 
	regional experts to warn that Yemen may be heading the same route as 
	Somalia.
 
 “With two conflicts carrying on simultaneously, that of 
	the Houthi Shia in the north and the secessionist movement in the south, the 
	militarization of Yemen and the primary US focus on it as another 
	battlefield in which to engage al-Qaeda, is only set to continue,” wrote 
	David Hearst in the Guardian on May 25.
 
 The US has much unfinished 
	business in Yemen. Like other US military adventures, the focus often stays 
	solely on military targets, without taking much notice of the larger social 
	and political challenges in the country. Needless to say, from a Yemeni 
	viewpoint the US must be the least attractive foreign power engaging their 
	government. During the popular revolt against Abdullah Saleh last year, 
	Yemenis were irritated by US support of their discredited president. They 
	were also unhappy with the US’ constant meddling in Yemeni affairs, and its 
	unrelenting war on Islamic rebels. The current open coordination between the 
	Yemeni president and the US is sure to prove costly to both parties in the 
	long run. A recent Al Jazeera report claimed that, “Washington has stepped 
	up drone attacks in Yemen since President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi took office 
	in February, and the Pentagon said it had recently resumed sending military 
	trainers to the Arab state” (May 24). This kind of reporting is hardly 
	helpful to the image of the new president who many hope will lead the 
	country to independence.
 
 The fighting is intensifying against 
	militants affiliated with al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, as many have 
	reportedly been killed in the city of Zinjibar, the town of Jaar, and also 
	in other areas in the south. The foolishness of engaging in traditional 
	warfare against a decentralized network of fighters - whether directly 
	affiliated with or inspired by al-Qaeda - without paying much attention to 
	the underpinnings of violence in a devastatingly poor country like Yemen, 
	cannot be overstated. The strength of such militant groups is often driven 
	by two main factors: their successful appeal to disfranchised, angry youth 
	in marginalized and impoverished communities, and their physical 
	maneuverability. Such groups can strike anywhere, anytime, with minimal 
	means.
 
 Even if one could accept that the central government of 
	Yemen, with US support, might successfully route out Islamic fighters from 
	their southern strongholds, this will certainly lead to the spreading out of 
	terror acts to far beyond Yemeni borders. The May 21 suicide bombing during 
	a military parade, which was readily claimed by al-Qaeda, leaves no doubt 
	that reclaiming a few towns in the south will not rid Yemen of its chronic 
	violence. In fact, US-assisted war against mostly poor communities can only 
	lead to more recruits for militant groups, and turn a traditional warfare, 
	demarcated by tribal lines, into a violent mayhem that will complicate an 
	already chaotic battleground.
 
 The Yemeni government should know 
	well that violence compounds, rather than resolves problems. This has been 
	the norm since Yemen’s independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1918, and 
	from British colonial rule in the south in 1967. Violence throughout the 
	tumultuous years since either widened conflicts, or created new ones. Yet, 
	the new ‘transitional’ government is playing into US hands by embarking on 
	yet another unwinnable ‘war on terror.’ The issue is not that terror should 
	not be fought, but how successful can such a fight be while recreating and 
	augmenting the very circumstances that led to its inception?
 
 Yemen 
	is poor. Entire communities teeter between mere survival and complete and 
	utter despair. The United Nations' Human Development Index –which is 
	measured based on life expectancy, level of education, and standard of 
	living - ranked Yemen in one of the most dismal spots, 154 out of 177 
	countries. Now, due to the revolution, the regime’s insistence on holding 
	onto power, the US war on al-Qaeda, and the latter’s unprecedented – and 
	expected – growth, the situation is getting much worse. "More than 10 
	million people -- almost one in two men, women and children -- in Yemen -- 
	are facing a looming catastrophe. Families are surviving, but only just. 
	Food and fuel price spikes, coupled with political instability, have left 
	Yemen's economy in tatters," wrote Kelly Gilbride of Oxfam, in a 
	heart-wrenching piece on CNN.com (May 24). She further asserted that “[a]lmost 
	half of Yemenis do not have enough to eat today and Yemen is entering its 
	hunger season. The world can bring Yemen back from the brink of catastrophe 
	-- but only if it acts now”.
 
 But acting ‘now’ should not just 
	translate into a few donation pledges here and there. The humanitarian 
	crisis in Yemen is largely rooted in the fact that the country is an open 
	field of competing interests, making it susceptible to corruption, 
	exploitation and terror. To be spared hunger, Yemen must regain its 
	independence - not through a new flag and national anthem, but through an 
	inclusive national program that reaches out to all sectors of Yemeni 
	society: the disfranchised, neglected south, the war-scarred north, and the 
	rest of the country with its chronic inequality. Schools, hospitals and 
	factories must replace military encampments. Large chunks of the budget – 
	especially of the newly pledged 4 billion dollars from neighboring Arab 
	countries – should help feed people, rebuild destroyed homes, and create job 
	opportunities. Effectively all the changes should contribute to more stable 
	social horizons.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
 
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