Yemen on the Brink
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Yemen on the Brink - Christopher Boucek
© 2010 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the Carnegie Endowment.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
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The Carnegie Endowment does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented here are the authors’ own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Endowment, its staff, or its trustees.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Yemen on the brink/Christopher Boucek and Marina Ottaway, editors.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-87003-253-0 (pbk.) ISBN 978-0-87003-254-7 (cloth) ISBN 978-0-87003-329-2 (e-book) 1. Yemen (Republic)—Politics and government. 2. Political violence—Yemen (Republic) 3. Islamic fundamentalism—Yemen (Republic) 4. Qaida (Organization) I. Boucek, Christopher. II. Ottaway, Marina.
JQ1842.A58Y46 2010
953.305’3—dc22 2010017143
Cover design by Zeena Feldman
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
Jessica T. Mathews
1: YEMEN: AVOIDING A DOWNWARD SPIRAL
Christopher Boucek
2: EXPLOITING GRIEVANCES: AL-QAEDA IN THE ARABIAN PENINSULA
Alistair Harris
3: WAR IN SAADA: FROM LOCAL INSURRECTION TO NATIONAL CHALLENGE
Christopher Boucek
4: THE POLITICAL CHALLENGE OF YEMEN’S SOUTHERN MOVEMENT
Stephen Day
5: WHAT COMES NEXT IN YEMEN? AL-QAEDA, THE TRIBES, AND STATEBUILDING
Sarah Phillips
6: STABILIZING A FAILING STATE
Marina Ottaway and Christopher Boucek
INDEX
CONTRIBUTORS
CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE
FOREWORD
Yemen faces an alarming confluence of challenges to its stability and that of its neighbors, and poses a real threat to the security of countries as far away as the United States. Dire economic circumstances, including poverty, unemployment, inflation, and the depletion of natural resources are compounded by the country’s addiction to qat—a widely produced and consumed stimulant—as well as the serious security threats of smuggling, religious and tribal conflict, terrorism, and war. Yemen has them all.
This volume presents groundbreaking new analysis of Yemen’s most pressing concerns, for the benefit of Western policy makers and other readers who recognize how dramatically the country’s condition could affect them if it continues to deteriorate. Christopher Boucek, who warned of the country’s dangerous downward spiral in September 2009, provides a broad overview of Yemen’s deterioration and examines in detail the six rounds of fighting in Saada province. Sarah Phillips explores Yemen’s tribal dynamics and the limits of foreign intervention in the country’s problems. Stephen Day assesses the southern secessionist movement and support for al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). Alistair Harris provides insights into whether the Yemeni regime can address the grievances articulated and tapped into by AQAP. In the concluding chapter Boucek and coauthor Marina Ottaway reflect on the options available to the international community to help stabilize the country.
The Republic of Yemen is strategically located between Saudi Arabia and Somalia—part of two distinct, yet interconnected regions, the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa. Though the country has been excluded from the wealthy Gulf Cooperation Council, it is in many ways more able to withstand multiple challenges than its East African neighbors. More than 3 million barrels of oil pass Yemen’s coast every day, through treacherous waters where Islamist terrorists and Somali pirates have staged many successful maritime attacks disrupting international commerce and the flow of vital hydrocarbons.
Inside Yemen, Islamist terrorists threaten Yemen’s domestic security, in the form of a resurgent al-Qaeda organization, as do an increasingly active secessionist movement in the South, and the armed insurrection in the North. While Yemen has survived crises in the past, they have tended to be singular events. The many problems Yemen now suffers are unprecedented in range and scope, and a historical absence of much central control makes it even more difficult to build effective national government.
As severe as these security challenges are, at the heart of Yemen’s problems is a looming economic crisis. The country is the poorest in the Arab world, its oil reserves are fast running out, and it has few viable options for a sustainable post-oil economy. Moreover, it is consuming its limited water resources much faster than it can replenish them. An impoverished and rapidly expanding population places unbearable pressure on the government, which can scarcely provide basic services. The faltering economy and poorly prepared workforce have pushed unemployment to 35 percent, on par with the Great Depression in the United States. Even for those who find work, poverty remains severe. The country has an annual per capita income of under $900, and nearly half the population earns less than $2 per day.
Yemen also confronts staggering demographic challenges. Though the population growth rate has decreased slightly in the past decade, it remains among the highest in the world, at just over 3.4 percent per year. As a result, more than two-thirds of the Yemeni people are under the age of 24, more than half of them illiterate. In the next two decades, Yemeni and Western analysts expect the country’s population to nearly double to more than 40 million.
The difficult terrain and geographic dispersion of the population exacerbate the demographic challenges. Yemen’s 23 million people are spread throughout roughly 135,000 villages and settlements. Many Yemeni villages are remote, spread across mountainsides and desert wadis, with less than one-third of the population living in urban areas. The central government has been unable to extend either a government presence or more than the most basic social services to its people. As a result, many settlements are forced to provide their own health care, schools, and other social services. The central government already struggles to exert control throughout the country, and its situation will only worsen as time passes.
In short, Yemen embodies a perfect storm of domestic and international challenges, and while they are all interrelated, any useful analysis—the starting point for addressing them—must break them down into manageable chunks. This book is a valuable start.
Jessica T. Mathews
President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
YEMEN: AVOIDING A DOWNWARD SPIRAL
Christopher Boucek
Yemen is beset by a host of challenges that endanger both its domestic stability and regional security. The United States and the international community must act now, before conditions deteriorate further, to help Yemen meet these challenges. While Yemen has survived crises in the past, they have tended to be singular events, while the many problems it now faces are unprecedented in range and scope.
The problems include international terrorism, violent extremism, religious and tribal conflict, separatism, and transnational smuggling. Attempts to build effective national governance are frustrated by porous borders, a heavily armed population, and a historical absence of much central government control. Between Saudi Arabia and Somalia, Yemen is strategically located—part of two different yet interconnected regions, the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa. This fact often frustrates policy analyses; Yemen is excluded from the wealthy Gulf Cooperation Council, but is in many ways more resilient than its East African neighbors. More than 3 million barrels of oil pass through the treacherous waters off the country’s coast every day. The constant risk of attack by Islamist terrorists and Somali pirates threatens to disrupt the flow of vital hydrocarbons and international commerce more broadly.
Interrelated economic, demographic, and domestic security challenges are converging to threaten the stability of Yemen. At the heart of the country’s problems is a looming economic crisis. Yemen’s oil reserves are fast running out, with few viable options for a sustainable post-oil economy. Moreover, the country’s limited water resources are being consumed much faster than they are being replenished. A rapidly expanding and increasingly poorer population places unbearable pressure on the government’s ability to provide basic services. Domestic security is endangered by Islamist terrorism, magnified by a resurgent al-Qaeda organization, an armed insurrection in the North, and an increasingly active secessionist movement in the South.
These challenges are compounded by corruption and an absence of central government control in much of the country, as well as by the pending transition in political leadership. President Ali Abdullah Saleh has ruled the Republic of Yemen since the unification of the Yemen Arab Republic in the North and the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen in the South in 1990. The next presidential election is scheduled for 2013. It is unclear whether Saleh will be eligible to stand for re-election for what would be a third term, and he has no obvious successor. The post-Saleh government will be severely strained by a combination of reduced revenue and diminished state capacity.
Yemen is the poorest country in the Arab world, and its population growth rate, which exceeds 3 percent per year, is among the world’s highest. The government has been unable to provide adequate educational or other public services for the rapidly expanding population, more than two-thirds of which is under the age of 24, and illiteracy stands at over 50 percent. The faltering economy and poorly prepared workforce have pushed unemployment to 35 percent, on par with the Great Depression in the United States. The country’s dire economic circumstances will soon limit the government’s ability to deliver the funds needed to hold the country together. The population is expected to double to 40 million over the next two decades, by which time Yemen will no longer be an oil producer, and its water resources will be severely diminished.
Yemen has been frequently discussed by observers as a failing state, and with good reason. Owing to the central government’s weak control, the country has often been on the brink of chaos, yet it has always managed to muddle through. One of its crises was precipitated by the Saleh regime’s failure to support United Nations Security Council resolutions calling for the use of force to evict Iraqi troops from Kuwait in 1990. U.S., Western, and Gulf Arab aid was cut dramatically in retaliation, and nearly 1 million Yemeni workers were expelled from Saudi Arabia. The unification of North and South Yemen earlier in 1990 and the 1994 civil war in which the South attempted to secede have also presented major challenges for the central government. However, unlike these individual challenges, the problems facing the country today are multiple and interconnected, each one posing serious threats to the future of Yemen, and together potentially overwhelming the state’s limited capacity.
Any single event—or more likely a confluence of worst-case events beyond the ability of the Yemeni government to control—could lead to a further erosion of central government authority in Yemen and destabilization of the region. A major humanitarian crisis, triggered perhaps by severe famine or crop failure, could, for instance, result in a large refugee emergency in which the government would be unable to provide even rudimentary relief services. A balance-of-payments crisis in which the regime could no longer afford to placate the urban areas that receive government services would be disastrous. An inability of a post-Saleh president to balance Yemen’s competing interests and stakeholders could create a power vacuum, with separate regions possibly growing more autonomous and independent from the central government in Sanaa.
Still, Yemen boasts a relatively resilient society that has already endured much, with little assistance from Sanaa. In some regards, in fact, low expectations for the Yemeni government to deal with future crises may help lessen their potential impact. Because rural muhafazat, or governorates, the administrative divisions in Yemen, do not currently rely on Sanaa for goods and services, what happens at the national level in the future may make little difference to much of the population.
If, however, the central government’s authority and legitimacy continue to deteriorate, Yemen may slowly devolve into semi-autonomous regions and cities. This trajectory has occurred in other countries, such as Somalia and Afghanistan, with disastrous consequences. Such a slow, emerging state of semi-lawlessness in