The war in Yemen looks like it’s coming to an end. U.S. media reported yesterday that a cease fire extending through 2023 had been agreed to, but those reports also included Houthi denials. But today Al Mayadeen, a generally pro-Houthi Lebanese news outlet, is reporting optimism from the Houthi side that the deal is real and the war is winding down.

What’s startling here is the apparent role of China in brokering a rapprochement between Iran and Saudi that made this possible. The Saudis seem like they are fully capitulating to the (quite reasonable) Houthi demands, which include opening the major port to allow critical supplies into the country, allowing flights, and allowing the government to have access to its currency to pay its workers and stabilize the economy. Reasonable stuff.

With the Saudis no longer backing militants in the war, those rump factions won’t have much capacity left to fight, though there will still probably be some clashes before it’s all said and done. The way the war is ending also underscores just how illegitimate the “government” of Yemen has been the last several years. In reality, it’s a group of exiles living in hotels in Riyadh, fully propped up by and under the thumb of Saudi Arabia. For a while, Saudi Arabia was referring to it in official documents as “The Legitimate Government of Yemen,” though it did no actual governing, and had no legitimacy outside its hotel.

It’s now led by the “Presidential Leadership Council,” and look at how the news was delivered to the “legitimate government of Yemen,” according to Al Mayadeen: “The sources stated that Riyadh informed the Presidential Leadership Council of its decision to end the war and conclude the Yemeni file permanently.”

The war is over. So is your government. The file is closed. Check out is at 11 am. You’ve been informed.

Erik Sperling, executive director of Just Foreign Policy, which has been working for an end to the war in Yemen for years, told me that the Saudi move suggests the country is looking out for its own interests rather than continuing the war for the benefit of U.S. interests in the region. "The Saudi concessions — including a potential lifting of the blockade and exit from the war — demonstrate that their priority is to protect Saudi territory from attack and focus on economic development at home,” he said. “This diverges from the approach preferred by many Washington foreign policy elites who continued to hope that the Saudi war and blockade could force the Houthis to make concessions and cede more power to the US-backed Yemeni 'government.' While the Houthis are a deeply flawed movement, it is both immoral and ineffective to try to counter them by pushing tens of millions of Yemenis to the brink of starvation. The Saudis are smart to cut their losses, end their complicity in this human rights nightmare, and refocus their attention to their own economic development."

    • MaoistLandlord [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Really, the one anyone should be weary of is the Saudis. If the US manages to entice them again, they'll become the lapdogs again. But perhaps they're smart and see the empire struggling and wants to chop up journalists without the help of americans

        • Tachanka [comrade/them]
          ·
          2 years ago

          yeah the Saudis going full Multipolar BRICS Gang was not something I would have been able to guess would happen a year ago, but in hindsight it's so obvious

        • ProxyTheAwesome [comrade/them]
          ·
          2 years ago

          Yes, at first I was surprised about the century loyal house of Saud going turncoat all of the sudden. However, it makes sense when you take into account this context. The Americans also failed to decisively end their proxy war in Yemen or help the Saudis enough to uphold their end of the implicit security deal (money for protection). The Houthis still kept striking Saudi vital infrastructure and the Saudis realized how vulnerable they are to sabotage, being in a desert and extracting resources to survive (desalination, oil, refining, etc).

          So your choices are: Stick with your weakening, increasingly desperate ally who appears to be using you as a front for a proxy war against Iran - and they will use you up the same way they are using up Ukraine. Or, you can swap to the emerging powers and growing economies of Russia, China, Iran, Asia, Africa, South America. The war with the Houthis goes away, the conflicts in Syria go away, Israel is now a problem however.