In Yemen today, the U.S. embassy is closed to the public. Officials are telling CNN there is credible information of a threat against Western interests there,” a CNN news anchor read the news bulletin on May 8.
This is CNN’s Yemen. It is a Yemen that seems to exist for one single purpose, and nothing else: maintain Western and, by extension, U.S. interests in that part of the world. When these interests are threatened, only then does Yemen matter.
Every reference in that specifically-tailored discourse serves a purpose. It is as if al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) exists to justify U.S. military intervention and unending drone war. Last April, 63 Yemenis were reportedly killed in U.S. drone strikes allegedly targeting al-Qaeda. No credible verification of that claim is available, and none of the victims have been identified. “Signature” drone strikes don’t require identification, we are told. It could take months, if not years, before rights groups shed light on the April killings, which are a continuation of a protracted drone war.
The Western narrative of Yemen is unmistakable. It is driven by interests and little else. It is ultimately about control of strategic areas. Yemen’s massive border with Saudi Arabia, and access to major waterway—the Red Sea, Gulf of Eden and the Arabian Sea—and its close proximity to Africa and Somalia in particular, all point to the unrivalled significance of Yemen to the U.S. and other Western powers. In this narrative, Yemen is about oil and security. It is about the kind of stability that guarantees that the status quo concerned with Western interests remain intact. Even the very geography of Yemen is somehow defined based on interests. On May 7, when militants reportedly bombed an oil export pipeline, halting the crude flow that travels between the central Maarib Province to the Red Sea, Yemen’s geography precipitously shrunk in media consciousness to a map that merely borders and follows the oil pipelines. Those who live, fight, starve, and die beyond the confines of the ill-defined Western interests often go unreported. Their share of the Yemen map is rarely highlighted.
In fact, little was known about Yemen in the West before October 2000, when U.S. naval vessel USS Cole was damaged in a suicide attack, killing 17 U.S. military. The attack was later blamed on al-Qaeda, paving the way for the opportune narrative which continues to define U.S. involvement in Yemen until this day. The U.S. war on terror had, in fact, reached Yemen even before the war in Iraq was unleashed a few years later. Thousands of people were killed, tens of thousands were displaced. The people of that poor, divided, corruption-laden country were punished severely for crimes they didn’t commit. The reason that the war in Yemen has never morphed into a war on Yemen is because the ruling class of that country found a way to co-exist with the ever prevalent U.S. interests, including their violent dimensions. Just as the U.S. began its military push against Yemen, then President Ali Abdullah Saleh introduced a referendum to modify the constitution in order to boost his (and his family’s) political power and extend his mandate.
Many Yemenis lost their lives protesting Saleh’s move. Washington, however, didn’t seem to mind. Saleh knew the price expected of him to ensure the barter. In November 2001, he made a highly choreographed visit to then U.S. President Bush in Washington, declaring that Yemen had officially joined the U.S. war on terror. The war in Yemen carried on for years, without mass protests in London and New York demanding an end to that war, as was the case in Iraq. Despite the military hardware, the military strikes, the drone attacks and the piled bodies of rarely identified victims, the war simply didn’t exist, although the facts prove otherwise.
Revolutionary Yemen
But intersecting with that Yemen, there is a Yemen that is poor, a Yemen that is rebellious and proud, and a Yemen that is marred in a civil war and seemingly endless division.
A fair historian would tell you that Yemen’s revolution started long before Tunisia and Egypt, and all the rest. That is a whole different Yemen, where the unemployed have exhibited a remarkable level of tenacity and determination, mass protesting for equality, reforms, freedom, and democracy.
The popular consciousness of Yemen is simply astounding. How could a people of a country, so poor and so divided, command a level of mass mobilization that is hardly paralleled anywhere else?
This is the dissident and spirited Yemen. Its youth have turned political organization into a form of art. When they amassed their popular, non-violent forces in major Yemeni cities in January 2011, there seemed to be no force, however lethal, capable of removing them from the squares. Indeed, Saleh tried, but the more he killed, the more committed to their non-violent resistance the Yemenis became, and the quicker their numbers multiplied. This politically conscious Yemen overlaps with another one, a Yemen of shocking statistics. It is a country of 25 million where 54 percent live below the poverty line and where unemployment among youth exceeds 60 percent (general unemployment stands at 40 percent, according to recent government reports cited by Al Monitor). Millions of Yemenis are malnourished. Malnutrition levels are the second highest in the world.Revolutionary Yemen feeds on and is inspired by poor, oppressed Yemen, which is exploited for political reasons by those who, in January 2010, designated themselves Friends of Yemen. It is another club that serves as a political platform meant to balance out the U.S. war on terror campaign, but pretends to operate independently from it. Yemen’s “friends” pledged billions, little of which has been delivered and only a portion of what is delivered is spent in ways that are transparent or helpful. There is little evidence that Yemen’s donors are making much difference in reversing the vicious cycle of entrenched poverty, rising unemployment, and continued deterioration of the economy.
Friends of Yemen behave as if the U.S. war is not a major component of Yemen’s crisis. Yemen’s problems and failures are discussed based on other variables—corruption, poor governance, and such. Millions of people have been displaced by this war. They are hungry, desperate, and frightened by the complete lack of security. Isn’t it strange that somehow the U.S. war is not an item on their agenda?
The official Yemeni discourse is even more curious. Formed in November 2011, after Saleh handed powers to his deputy, now President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi, the Yemeni government continues to speak of dialogue and reforms. The National Dialogue Conference concluded in January 2014 after ten months of intense discussions. In February, a governmental committee approved the recommendation of turning Yemen into a federation of six regions. This is meant to be the first practical step towards a lasting political transition, but it’s likely to inspire further divides where some southern parties are vying for complete secession from the north, and are now organizing to defeat the government initiative. Yemen is a country of deep political divisions with a bloody history of separation and unity, and perplexing political alliances.
But why are we hesitant to tell the Yemeni story as it is, with all of its complexities and details? Are we intimidated by the sheer intricacy of the story? Or is it because we remember Yemen when it is convenient to do so? Western media mentions Yemen whenever al-Qaeda threatens western interests or when angry tribespeople —frustrated by the joint U.S.-central government violence and years of neglect—blow up an oil pipeline.
Throughout much of 2011, Arab media covered Yemen around the clock promoting an indiscriminate Arab Spring narrative, with little regard to the distinctiveness of the Yemeni story. When the spring didn’t deliver what it promised, Yemen was disowned and forgotten, as it has always been.
The United Nations occasionally remembers Yemen in one of its intermittent reports, highlighting the poverty, malnutrition, and unemployment with atrocious graphs and grim numbers. The odd thing is that there is only one Yemen and one Yemeni story: that of war, western intervention, corruption, division, unemployment, terror, poverty, and revolution. They are all aspects of the same story and will continue to form one singular rationale of why Yemen is in this awful crisis. Until we realize this, Yemen will continue to be divided into mini-stories and numerous narratives that hardly overlap in news broadcasts, despite the fact that they always really do.
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Ramzy Baroud is a columnist, media consultant and founder of Palestine-Chronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story. (A version of this article was first published in Middle East Eye, www.middleeasteye.net).