Illusion of respite: Yemen peace talks are oversold

One reason is that Yemen’s Presidential Council, the executive body of the internationally recognised government, was not included in the negotiations, nor were any other Yemeni parties, such as the separatists of the Southern Transitional Council.

Update: 2023-04-14 09:30 GMT
Representative image

WASHINGTON: This week’s hearty handshake by the Saudi ambassador to Yemen, Mohammed bin Saeed al-Jaber, and the political head of the Houthi rebels, Mahdi al-Mashat, has kindled a glimmer of hope that there could be an end to the war in Yemen. Since Sunday, Saudi and Houthi delegations have been holding peace talks in the Houthi-controlled capital, Sanaa.

The main topics on the negotiating table are a six-month truce between the two warring parties — the Saudi-backed internationally recognised government and the Iran-aligned Houthis — the reopening of the Houthi-controlled airport in Sanaa and the Red Sea port in Hodeida, the lifting of the Houthi blockade of the government-controlled city of Taiz, the resumption of oil exports from government-held oil fields via Houthi gateways and the consolidation of Yemen’s economy.

However, despite the international hope that has accompanied this latest round of talks, there are some doubts peace could be imminent.

One reason is that Yemen’s Presidential Council, the executive body of the internationally recognised government, was not included in the negotiations, nor were any other Yemeni parties, such as the separatists of the Southern Transitional Council.

Yemen’s two main political factions, the Houthis and the government, have been at war since 2014 when Iran-backed Houthi rebels seized Sanaa and ousted the government. In 2015, the situation escalated when a Saudi-led coalition of nine countries intervened in an effort to restore the internationally recognised government in the city of Aden, on the Red Sea coast.

The brutal conflict — widely seen as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran — has caused almost half a million deaths and resulted in the internal displacement of thousands of people. According to the United Nations, at least one-third of the population of 31 million is fully dependent on international aid. The situation in the war-torn country is widely considered one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

Marwa Baabbad, director of the Berlin-based think tank Yemen Policy Center Germany, doesn’t think the current talks are actually aimed at ending the war. “Major differences between the Yemeni parties must be addressed to open a window for sustainable peace”, she told DW.

“Oman’s purpose was not to broker a wider Yemen national peace but to convince the Houthis to end their cross-border attacks, and ease the relationship between the Saudis and the Houthis,” she said.

The Houthi group could indeed be next on Saudi Arabia’s list of efforts to mend ties with regional enemies, after agreeing to reestablish diplomatic relations with archenemy Iran in March after seven years of frozen ties. And it’s no secret that Saudi Arabia has become highly interested in exiting the costly proxy war in Yemen.

Abdulghani Al-Iryani, a senior researcher at the Sanaa Center for Strategic Studies, told DW he believed Yemen was being used as a pawn. “Saudi Arabia is pursuing short-term objectives at the expense of its long-term interests in durable stability and security in the region,” he said.

“Saudi Arabia has given the Houthis the right to represent Yemen at the expense of all other parties,” he added, warning that this, in combination with the Houthis’ unwillingness to share political power, could accelerate the destabilisation of the country.

“The current talks may even increase the risk of a disintegration of the state, as the other parties will not agree to live under Houthi control,” Al-Iryani said.

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