houthi
  • The war in Gaza has expanded to include a new and dangerous flashpoint: the Red Sea. In recent weeks, Yemen’s Houthis have targeted “Israeli” cargo ships – and attacked others – in support of Hamas. The US and the UK have retaliated by bombing a number of Houthis’ targets in Yemen. ResetDOC interviewed Hussein Ibish, senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, about the stakes for the Houthis and the risks of a wider high-intensity conflict.
  • Eleonora Ardemagni 31 March 2015
    History has its paradoxes and Yemen is a country in which tribal power games matter more than anything else. Between 1962 and 1970, Saudi Arabia and Egypt took part in the civil war in the north of the country. The Saudis supported the Royalists, faithful to the deposed Zaidite Shiite imam, while the Egyptians, who were unsuccessful, withdrew in 1967, after supporting the pro-republican military. The Yemen Arab Republic had come into existence in 1962. In a famous book published in 1971, Malcolm Kerr called the rivalry between Riyadh and Cairo an "arab cold war." [1] Forty years later, Yemen is the fulcrum of the “Middle Eastern Cold War” between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
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