Nemets Profile picture
Jun 19, 2024 73 tweets 49 min read Read on X
Thread with excerpts from "Tribes and Politics in Yemen: A History of the Houthi Conflict" by @BrandtMarieke Image
The concept of "dual use" knowledge Image
Provinces of Yemen Image
tribes of Sa'dah province (left) and al-Jawf province (right)
Image
Image
Sheikhs in north Yemen are elected from eligible men from the sheikh's family. Their authority is largely a product of their role as mediators & arbiters between the clans. They rely heavily on local notables & elders to aide them. State, customary, & sharia law coexist.

Image
Image
Image
While Sayyids have intermarried with Yemenis over last 1100 years, they practiced partial endogamy to maintain their status as outsiders. Their power was typically limited to religion & charitable endowments. They were seen as high status, but also weak & in need of protection.


Image
Image
Image
Some parts of the world fell into dark ages as late as the 1980s. Image
1911 treaty between Zaydis & Ottomans gave the Zaydi Imam power in northern Yemen. The Imam ruled partly through religious authority, but also through hostage taking & sheikh appointments. Latter two were deeply unpopular, although some tribes had good relations with the Imam.
Image
Image
1962-1970 North Yemeni Civil War saw the new Zaydi Imam flee to the western parts of the country from the Republicans. Northern tribes largely hated the brutal, nerve-gas using Egyptians & backed the Imam; but some supported Republicans as they promised economic development.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Withdrawal of Egyptian forces from Yemen in 1967 allowed Imamate to besiege Sana'a. Republican broke siege in February 1968 with help of pro-Republican tribes from Sa'dah. Republicans, aided by those tribes, later retook Sa'dah & conquered last Imamate strongholds in 1970.

Image
Image
Image
the tribes of Sa'dah are known for their constancy & loyalty - unlike other Yemenis. Image
Sayyids were seen as reactionaries, & lost their position after the Republican victory in civil war. The charitable endowments (waqfs) which they had run were redistributed to Republican sheikhs, empowering local sheikhs while forcing sayyids to either flee or become bureaucrats.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Yemen Arab Republic was weak state, & devolved much authority to sheikhs 1971-4. It tried to integrate them to political structure by making them colonels. President al-Hamdi (1974-7) removed powerful sheikhs from government positions to build a state, so they assassinated him.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Power vacuum left by al-Hamdi's assassination allowed for rise of Salih, who staffed empty spots of YAR's military & administration with members of his Sanhan tribe & other tribes within Hashid confederation. His covenant lasted until the mid-2000s.
Image
Image
Non-Hashid sheikhs were unhappy with being sealed off from higher positions, but were bought off with money transfers that exceeded what they could earn from their local territories. This isolated some sheikhs from their people, weakening tribal ties.

Image
Image
Image
Sa'dah's economy greatly benefitted from remittances from Saudi Arabia prior to the Saudi expulsion of Shia Yemenis in 1990. Yemen had abstained from joining the condemnation of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, infuriating the Saudis. Image
Better government control of Yemeni-Saudi border from mid-1980s on gave control of smuggling to a few large-scale operations. Smugglers occasionally fought to the death due to Saudi beheadings of drug smugglers. Large fraction of Sa'dah population was involved in smuggling.

Image
Image
Image
Sa'dah Wars of the 2000s featured, among others, a heavily armed but neutral merchant faction which sought to trade with everyone on equal terms.
Image
Image
Saudis took over Idrisid Emirate in 1926, and conquered Najran from Zaydi Imamate in 1934. Yemeni irredentists claim both territories.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Saudi-Yemen border was reaffirmed in 1953 and 1973, but unified Yemen almost went to war with Saudis in 1992 & 1994 over the lost territories. It wasn't until 2000 that the issue was permanently resolved in Saudi Arabia's favor.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Saudi border wall construction in 2000s infuriated the heavily armed Ismaili al-Hussein tribe which had previously held lands on both sides of the border. The al-Husseins were allies of Qatar, & sympathetic to al-Qaeda.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Zaydis first arrived in Yemen in 897, invited by tribes who desired a foreign intermediary to resolve their internecine conflicts. The first Zaydi imam in Yemen settled in Sa'dah City.
Image
Image
Zaydi imams had to be sayyids; but were otherwise eligible for the position if they possessed great character and knowledge - plus the courage to seize the imamate.

Image
Image
Image
Zaydi thought gradually converged with that of the Shafis, starting in 15th century. By 17th century, Qasimi family took over the imamate and adopted dynastic succession - leading to the decline of Zaydiism per some thinkers.
Image
Image
Saudis funded Wahhabi schools in the YAR. Even though the schools promoted sectarianism, government believed that they would neutralize the Zaydi threat, improve relations with Saudis. & inoculate the next generation against the socialism promoted by South Yemen.
Image
Image
While some Zaydi thinkers promoted reconciliation with Republicans and Sunnis, greater Sunni assertiveness in Yemen led to a deliberate re-emphasis by Zaydis on Shia rituals as early as mid-1980s. Image
Zaydis set up their own network of schools beginning in early 1990s. A Zaydi youth organization rapidly grew at same time, and attracted attention from elderly scholars.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Hussein al-Houthi supported democratic elections in 1993, considering them permissible under Zaydi political teaching.
Image
Image
Hussein al-Houthi's 1993 election victory for a parliamentary seat worried a number of sheikhs in Sa'dah, who feared a sayyid politician as a threat to their authority.
Image
Image
"king in the mountain" myths allow for old allies to keep face & be treated with respect when they withdraw their support from a dynasty after a succession. Image
Sheikhs dominated Sa'dah's electoral politics by using their own power as well as support from General People's Congress (Yemen's main party). The only non-sheikhs to win parliamentary elections in 1993 and 2003 were associated with grassroots Zaydi revival movement.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Zaydi revivalists and later the Houthis were at points in 1990s and 2000s represented in government as a loyal opposition, but they were gradually squeezed out of political system or killed.
Image
Image
Split in Believing Youth (Zaydi revivalists) between Houthis & quietists occurred in 2001. Named "God's Supporters" only in 2011, Houthis initially called themselves "People of the Slogan". Slogan was "Death to America, Death to Israel, Curse Upon the Jews, Victory for Islam".

Image
Image
Image
Yemeni government's support for USian terror campaigns after September 2001 as well as domestic Salafis & discrimination against Zaydis made the Houthis popular in Sa'dah. Houthis increasingly saw the government as an enemy power.

Image
Image
Image
Republican support for local sheikhs had led to corruption rather than development in the provinces. By contrast, the Houthis used their limited resources to electrify parts of Sa'dah as soon as the wars for the region began in 2004.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Leadup to First Sa'dah War: Houthi slogan is chanted at President Salih, USians demand suppression of Houthis, mass arrests of Houthis, mass sackings of Houthis from jobs, Hussein al-Houthi refuses a summons from Salih to visit Sanaa, 10 Zaydi scholars condemn Houthis.

Image
Image
Image
Zaydi traditions had been withering away since the Republican victory in the 1962-1970 civil war, so some Yemenis believed that Houthis, in promoting certain customs, were in fact Iranian proxies.

Image
Image
Image
Colonel al-Amri was appointed governor of Sa'dah by ruling GPC party in 2001. al-Amri moved to bureaucratize & standardize the provincial government, which alienated the local power brokers. He used informers to spy on Houthis & their supporters, who were preparing for war.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Four days after the mass arrests in June 2004, Yemeni armored forces and irregulars advanced into Sa'dah province, aiming to eliminate bandits who controlled certain roads as well as to arrest Hussein al-Houthi. Houthis rose up in Sa'dah City, taking control of parts of it.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Salih believed that it would take Yemeni army and his tribal auxiliaries 48 hours to crush the Houthis. Instead, the war dragged out, and the destruction that it wrought inspired terrible animosity among the people of Sa'dah - even those initially unsympathetic to the Houthis.
Image
Image
First Sa'dah War ended with Battle of Jurf Salman on 10 September 2004. Hussein al-Houthi & a few dozen followers were shelled, tear-gassed, & smoked out of their cave redoubt. al-Houthi was summarily executed, guaranteeing his memory as a martyr, & the battle's as a new Karbala.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Second Sa'dah War began in March 2005, after an additional wave of anti-Zaydi repression & an infamous interview of Hussein al-Houthi's father, who condemned the government as USian allies. Houthis preferred guerrilla tactics in open areas during the second war.

Image
Image
Image
Second Sa'dah War drew more clans into the government-Houthi conflict. Clans which had become wealthy from supporting Republicans in 1962-1970 civil war were backed by government, but faced hostility from poorer clans who wanted more wealth & influence, & decided to back Houthis.

Image
Image
Image
Sudan is seen as a brutal place even by Yemeni standards. During Second Sa'dah War, government's use of Hashid tribesmen against Houthis led many Sa'dah locals to see the war as a tribal feud, and rallied behind the Houthis.
Image
Image
Second Sa'dah War ended in April 2005 with the surrender of two Houthi strongholds. However, Houthi leadership escaped the government's cordons and sweeps. Image
Third Sa'dah War lasted from November 2005 to February 2006. More of the province was involved, and masses of tribesmen joined Houthi ranks to fight against their local rivals as well as government troops.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Third Sa'dah War ended with a truce. Funds were given to pro-government tribes for infrastructure construction, Zaydi schools reopened, prisoners were amnestied, the Houthi slogan was to not be chanted at mosques, & Houthis endorsed the constitution.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Salih won the 2006 election in a landslide, even in Sa'dah. Houthis refused to participate in the election, so turnout was low in Sa'dah.

Image
Image
Image
By the end of the Third Sa'dah War; too much blood had been shed, too many weapons distributed, and too many men mobilized for peace to have been attainable. The conflict had heated far beyond the norms of tribal conflicts.

Image
Image
Image
Iran didn't materially support the Houthis until 2011, but Salih insisted to Saudis and USians from the beginning that the unrest in Sa'dah was an Iranian op. Neither believed him, but USians gave a few hundred million $ worth of arms to him in hopes he'd resolve the issue.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Iran only began paying serious attention to Yemen after the Saudis intervened in 2009. Limited material support for the Houthis began in 2011, and its support for the Houthis expanded beginning in 2014.
Image
Image
Libya, always eager to undermine its reactionary enemy in Saudi Arabia, threw a few score million dollars at northern Yemeni sheikhs to stir up trouble on the southern border in 2006. The money was squandered, but did cause some tribal feuds.



Image
Image
Image
Image
Fourth Sa'dah War forced the government to recruit Sunni militants to bolster the faltering army. Recruitment of troops from local tribes weakened authority of the sheikhs, leading several to break with the government.
Image
Image
One Houthi threatened Jews in a suburb of Sa'dah. The Jews fled to Sa'dah, then Sana'a. USA demanded that Yemen protect its Jews, & EU threatened to put Houthis on terror list. Government seized opportunity to launch Fourth Sa'dah War nine days later with international backing.
Image
Image
Yemeni government deployed 15,000 troops to destroy the Houthis in February 2017, with 30,000 deployed by April. The Houthis had considerably fewer men, but had been preparing since the last war.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Houthis rejected the Saudi annexation of Najran, Asir, and Jizan - at least in 2007. Image
Dahyan had a large sayyid population & strongly supported the Houthis. Government troops & auxiliaries assaulted it during the Fourth Sa'dah War from February to June 2007. The Houthis offered fanatical resistance and held on to the city.

Image
Image
Image
Most of Sa'dah fell under Houthi control in early part of the Fourth Sa'dah War, humiliating the government. Image
Failure of the military and Hashid auxiliaries in the Fourth Sa'dah War led to government drawing on support from Salafi & Shafi'i thinkers & their followers. The conflict became more explicitly sectarian.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Qatar's efforts at mediating the Sa'dah Conflict failed. After months of skirmishes, the Fifth Sa'dah War exploded in May 2008 and lasted until July. Salih was also distracted by the rekindling of the conflict in southern Yemen. Fighting spread from Sa'dah to al-Jawf province.


Image
Image
Image
Image
In Fifth Sa'dah War, Houthis sent a few hundred men to Bani Hushaysh - a suburb of Sana'a. Republican Guard was deployed to clear them out, but was unsuccessful.

Image
Image
Image
Al-Jawf is the poorest part of Yemen. Its people are known as savages (one tribe's name is literally "The Raiders"), but their sheikhs were easily bought off by the government prior to the rise of the Houthis.

Image
Image
Image
Fifth Sa'dah War ended in July 2008. Yemeni government's domestic & international positions were weak, so Salih unilaterally declared ceasefire - allowing him to withdraw certain military units from Sa'dah, maneuver political rival into weaker position, & cut Saudi influence.

Image
Image
Image
Houthis used the ceasefire between the Fifth and Sixth Sa'dah Wars to annex additional tribal territories. Tribal customary law had been largely superseded by that point.
Image
Image
During the interim between the Fifth and Sixth Sa'dah Wars, Houthis would show up to mosques in al-Jawf, shout their slogan, then start a fight.
Image
Image
Sixth Sa'dah War lasted from August 2009 to February 2010. Government launched a brutal punitive campaign, but Houthis were so strong that government was pushed back. Saudi intervention in November 2009 was a heavy burden on Houthis and relieved Yemeni government.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Saudi aerial bombardments and cross-border shellings of Houthis had been prepared for some time before Sixth Sa'dah War. Houthis still managed to invade Saudi Arabia & hold parts of it for a month - apparently with sympathy of local Saudi Zaydis.
Image
Image
By late 2009, Houthis were purchasing weapons from China, shipping them to Yemen, then smuggling them across government-controlled territory to their bases in the north.
Image
Image
Faris Mana, arms procurer for the government, smuggler for the Houthis, and politician; finally got in trouble for selling weapons to al-Shabaab in Somalia in April 2010. He later became the Houthi governor of Sa'dah in 2011. Image
End of Sixth Sa'dah War in February 2010 left government only in control of Sa'dah City in Sa'dah. Anti-Houthis sheikhs formed the Tribal Alliance which fought until its collapse in March 2011. The Tribal Alliance hollowed itself out in its attempt to be a mirror of the Houthis.


Image
Image
Image
Image
Houthis took advantage of the chaos in Sana'a during Arab Spring of 2011. They crushed their remaining tribal opponents, then swept bloodlessly into Sa'dah City on 24 March 2011. All of Sa'dah was theirs.

Image
Image
Image
Houthis continued to advance from 2011-2014, fighting various tribal and Salafist groups. Salih, in a cynical effort at holding power, aided their expansion by allowing arms smuggling to them in an effort to undermine his internal enemies & make himself indispensable.
Image
Image
The Fall of Sana'a on 21 September 2014. After a decade of war, the Houthis had won. Image

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Nemets

Nemets Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @Peter_Nimitz

Mar 18
Thread with excerpts from "The Other Quiet Revolution: National Identities in English Canada, 1945-71" by Jose Igartua Image
Author argues national identity among English-speaking Canadians died entirely in mid-20th century, and was replaced by a broader civic identity. Nonetheless there is still an English-Canadian nation that can be seen sociologically through shared culture. Image
Image
Image
Image
90% of Canadians read at least one newspaper in 1969, compared to only 68% watching television news. Spread of opinion polling ended up restricting range of public discussion. Image
Image
Read 11 tweets
Jan 29
Thread with excerpts from "Lies of the Tutsi in Eastern Congo/Zaire. A Case Study: South Kivu (Pre-Colonial to 2018)" by John Kapapi Image
At the time of the 1884 Berlin Conference, what is now the eastern Congo was ruled by eight kingdoms. Rwanda had yet to be united. Per the author, Rwandan (Tutsi & Hutu) migration west of Lake Kivu was minimal at the time. Image
Image
Belgians created two chiefdoms in North Kivu. One was given to Tutsi from Hunde in 1922, & other was bought from the Hunde in 1939. Conflict with Hunde led to Tutsi preferring to flee to South Kivu during the dynastic struggles following overthrow of King Rwabugiri in 1895. Image
Image
Image
Read 6 tweets
Jan 16
Thread with excerpts from "The Morning After: The 1995 Quebec Referendum and the Day that Almost Was" by Chantal Hebert and Jean LaPierre Image
Timeline of Quebecois separatism from Parti Quebecois's first provincial victory in 1976 to the 2014 Quebec National Assembly election Image
Image
Image
4.5 million people voted in the 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum. It was decided by a mere 54,288 votes - less than 1% of those cast. Image
Read 24 tweets
Dec 21, 2024
At AmFest - funny to realize that the pro-smoking stuff on rw twitter was an advertising agency op Image
Glenn Beck is apparently still alive - he and Levin are the only two people on this I've heard of Image
Lara Trump & Kirk letting their faces to be used to advertise an obscure finance app is quite in character. Image
Read 10 tweets
Sep 18, 2024
In line with archaeology, western & central Iberia were populated by hunter-gatherers distinctive from those on Mediterranean coast by their higher Magdalenian ancestry. Those hunter-gatherers had a resurgence over the EEFs as elsewhere during neolithic.



Image
Image
Image
Image
Steppe ancestry in IEs was diluted by the time that they reached SW Iberia at end of third millennium, in line with other studies. However, there are signs of an Eastern Mediterranean migration to Iberia in Bronze Age or earlier:


Image
Image
Image
There was substantial migration to urban areas in Portugal during the Roman period from Eastern Mediterranean and North Africa. If these samples are representative, about half of the urban population was foreign-derived. Date of the site isn't provided, but was after 100 BC.

Image
Image
Image
Read 6 tweets
Sep 17, 2024
Caesar's destructiveness around the Rhine can be seen in the palynological record around Cologne. The area was densely cultivated starting about 250 BC and reforested after 50 BC, implying depopulation for a century. Image
Image
Image
pre-modern mass migrations often had appalling death tolls. Pressure of the German Suebi on the Celt Helvetii must have been tremendous: Image
Image
Tiberius withdrew Roman troops from east of the Rhine, but left a 10 km no man's land that wasn't resettled by Germans until the late first or early second centuries. Image
Image
Read 9 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(