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Unsettling video shows large al Qaeda meeting in Yemen

@Serpentine

Stick to your militarily, religiously, culturally, linguistically and ethically failed Mullah entity. You have nothing to do with the ancient Arab world and are an non-welcomed and hated foreign element. Just stick to the failed stan's such as Afghanistan and Tajikistan. Your brothers.

You are a pariah state and the world's largest sponsor of terrorism ruled by fake wannabe Arabs.

Iran and state-sponsored terrorism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Our cousins the Jews will deal with you and we should help them if necessary.

In any case Yemen has nothing to do with you.
 
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@Serpentine

Stick to your militarily, religiously, culturally, linguistically and ethically failed Mullah entity. You have nothing to do with the ancient Arab world and are an non-welcomed and hated foreign element. Just stick to the failed stan's such as Afghanistan and Tajikistan. Your brothers.

You are a pariah state and the world's largest sponsor of terrorism.

In any case Yemen has nothing to do with you.

Okay
 
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Long ago watch documentary " 5 broken cameras ".....it was nominated for Oscar...when listen to these arab, it feel better be silent....plus recently released movie " Omar". amazing.....
 
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Interesting read from foreign affairs site.


In Yemen, political actors are more numerous, autonomous, fractious, and militarized than they are in other countries on the Arabian Peninsula. Yemen cannot be stabilized by the sorts of tactics that Riyadh has used elsewhere: a small show of force, the backing of one faction over another, the raising of the specters of sectarianism and Iran's nefarious hand, or simply throwing money at the problem. Bringing order to Yemen will require Saudi Arabia to find an acceptable alternative to Saleh -- a proposition that is easier said than done.

Saudi Arabia has historically tried to keep Yemen's central government weak and its political actors divided.

Saudi Arabia has historically tried to keep Yemen's central government weak and its political actors divided. The thought of a strong and united Yemen gives the Saudi royals pause: Yemen is the most populous country in the Arabian Peninsula, with 24 million people, a population that is heavily armed, tribal, and impoverished. To maintain its influence over the decades, Riyadh has cultivated discrete relationships with many of Yemen's political leaders (who serve in government) and tribal sheikhs (who form a counterweight to the central government).

Riyadh has not hesitated to punish Sana'a whenever it has expressed an independent policy. For example, during the Gulf War, when Saleh sided with Iraq's Saddam Hussein against Kuwait and the Saudi-led coalition, Saudi Arabia expelled nearly a million Yemeni migrant workers and cut off official aid to Yemen. (It did not, however, end its handouts to Yemen's tribes.) This moment marked the beginning of the unraveling of Yemen's economy, which today is in tatters. A few years later, in 1994, during Yemen's civil war, Riyadh continued to punish Saleh by supporting the secessionist socialists in southern Yemen. The Saudi leadership was not bothered by the fact that, in Wahhabi eyes, the socialists were infidels, further underscoring the pragmatic and non-ideological nature of Saudi Arabia's foreign policy.

For decades, Saudi Arabia's policy toward Yemen was set by Crown Prince Sultan, the head of the Saudi "special committee," an administrative organization that managed the Kingdom's relationship with Yemen's political and tribal actors, including the disbursement of regular monetary payments to Yemen's most prominent leaders. But over the last few years, Prince Sultan's health has deteriorated (he suffers from dementia) and the special committee has effectively stopped functioning. Saudi Arabia's policy toward Yemen is allegedly now being managed by Prince Nayef, the Saudi Minister of the Interior, whose son, Prince Muhammad, is responsible for fighting al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Prince Nayef has his favorite Yemeni players, including a number of Salafis and Islamists, as well as General Ali Muhsin, a relative of Saleh's and a contender to replace him in power.

The Saudi leadership has strong connections with other factions in Yemen, such as Hamid and Sadiq al-Ahmar, the two brothers who lead the Hashid tribal confederation and who were engaged in open battle with Saleh's forces last week; tribal sheikhs from the Bakil confederation, the country's largest; and influential families and tribes from south Yemen. The Saudis clearly are not short of Yemeni clients who would want to rule the country. The trick, however, will be to find a person or a coalition of leaders who can bring a modicum of stability and prove acceptable to the opposition forces. The anti-regime youth may have the greatest numbers in the streets, but they have no recognized leaders and no established links to Saudi Arabia.

Saleh's fate was effectively sealed on May 22, when he refused -- for the third time -- to sign a Gulf Cooperation Council plan, supported by the Saudis, that would have allowed him to resign and obtain immunity from prosecution. Saleh then attacked his tribal rivals and was subsequently severely injured in the June 3 bomb attack, for which he sought treatment in Riyadh. (Although Germany and the United States have long been the preferred destinations of the Yemeni elite for medical treatment, Saleh does not fear criminal prosecution in Saudi Arabia as he does in those countries.) The central question now is whether the Saudis will allow him to return to Sana'a or offer him and his family asylum, most likely in Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates, which he cannot refuse. Yemen's fate hinges on this decision -- Saleh's return would very likely result in a civil war.

This is unlikely, however. Influential members of the Saudi royal family know Saleh well and know that his return could be explosive, a scenario they want to avoid at all costs. One senior Saudi prince recently told me that Saleh was the root cause of Yemen's problems and described him as a "lying trickster" who could not be trusted to bring calm. If Saudi Arabia will not allow Saleh to return to Yemen, what sort of government will it work to establish in his place?

Already various Yemeni opposition figures, including the Ahmar brothers, are publicly ingratiating themselves with Riyadh, in the hope that they will be chosen as the Kingdom's favorites in succeeding Saleh. The Ahmar brothers, for example, have praised Saudi leadership and declared that they are obediently abiding by a Saudi-negotiated ceasefire.

It will be difficult to balance Saudi interests with Yemeni demands. Some of Riyadh's principal Yemeni clients, such as General Ali Muhsin (one of Saleh's relatives who recently joined the opposition) and the Ahmar sheikhs, are unacceptable to the majority of Yemenis. Not only are they perceived to be deeply complicit in Saleh's corrupt and authoritarian system but they would also not allow for the emergence of a political order that is democratic, accountable, and representative. Most worrying for Riyadh, such a state could very well be less amenable to Saudi influence in Yemen and would put forward a successful model for republican rule in a region dominated by monarchies.

The Muslim Brotherhood has played an important role in the demonstrations and enjoys legitimacy among Yemen's opposition. Some observers have attributed the discipline and nonviolent tactics of the youth in the street to the Brotherhood's effective leadership. It is unlikely, however, that Saudi Arabia will want someone like Sheikh al-Zindani, a Yemeni Muslim Brotherhood leader, in a prominent position. From Riyadh's perspective, the Muslim Brotherhood -- whether in Yemen or elsewhere -- has proven unreliable and is a potential challenger of the Islamic legitimacy of the Saudi regime.

Like their counterparts in Tunisia and Egypt, the demonstrators who have taken to the streets in Yemen over the past months want a new political order, not more of the same. They want a transitional government of national unity, composed of technocrats, that will function until new parliamentary and presidential elections can be held. This, in effect, means the establishment of a democratic order -- an outcome that Riyadh, for ideological and practical reasons, will be reluctant to midwife. This leaves Saudi Arabia caught between two contradictory policy imperatives: maintaining its influence in Yemen and rendering the country sufficiently stable so as not to pose a threat. In Yemen, Riyadh is confronted with difficult choices and no easy solutions.

Saudi Arabia's Yemen Dilemma | Foreign Affairs
 
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Long ago watch documentary " 5 broken cameras ".....it was nominated for Oscar...when listen to these arab, it feel better be silent....plus recently released movie " Omar". amazing.....

English please. I know that you love commenting on Yemen and the remaining Arabian Peninsula. You seem to have a love-hate relationship. it's ok. We will give you some attention since this is an Pakistani forum.
 
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English please. I know that you love commenting on Yemen and the remaining Arabian Peninsula. You seem to have a love-hate relationship. it's ok. We will give you some attention since this is an Pakistani forum.
You don't need to...situation beyond your reach. Only your keyboard in your control.....instead commenting me, watch the documentary and learn the ground reality....
 
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It isn't an obsession about Iran. It is Mullahs' Iranorealism.

Iran obsession at it again?

No interests in journalistic bubbles. I'd like to see any materialistic evidence, international entities, or at least direct charged against KSA.
 
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You don't need to...situation beyond your reach. Only your keyboard in your control.....instead commenting me, watch the documentary and learn the ground reality....

Which documentary are you talking about? Stop acting like a cretin. The Arab world by large and especially the GCC live much, much better than your ethnic group can ever imagine living. Don't you worry.

Yemen might be very poor and have its problems but it has immense natural beauty and an ancient civilization, one of the oldest in the world, and they are very warm people that have been praised by Prophets, Prophet Muhammad (saws) himself to the ancient Romans and Greeks and other ancient civilizations in the ME or outside of it. That's never going to change.

Yemen will be defended from Shia fanatics and outsiders meddling and other unwanted elements.
 
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much better than your ethnic group can ever imagine living. Don't you worry.
Can you tell me my ethnic group ? ......please
 
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Can you tell me my ethnic group ? ......please

All of them which are living in Pakistan have it much worse. We all know it. But you can tell us here. I think that you are either a Punjabi or a Sindhi. The ethnic groups with most ties to India. Or maybe you are an Muhajir?

Anyway did you even understand what I wrote in my last post?
 
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All of them which are living in Pakistan have it much worse. We all know it. But you can tell us here. I think that you are either a Punjabi or a Sindhi. The ethnic groups with most ties to India. Or maybe you are an Muhajir?

Anyway did you even understand what I wrote in my last post?

You are amazing.........ok watch " 5 broken camera " A documentary on a Palestinian farmer's chronicle of his nonviolent resistance to the actions of the Israeli army. Oscar nominated. I belong to no ethnic group, am dust in the wind.
 
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You are amazing.........ok watch " 5 broken camera " A documentary on a Palestinian farmer's chronicle of his nonviolent resistance to the actions of the Israeli army. Oscar nominated. I belong to no ethnic group, am dust in the wind.

Wait a second. Why are you talking about a documentary about Palestine in this thread and what has this to do with Yemen, GCC or Al-Qaeda?

Yes, you do but for some strange reason you are not willing to tell it here. Fair enough.

I have watched enough of documentaries about Palestine and quite frankly I am sick and tired of that conflict. Let the Israelis and Palestinians deal with it alone. Nobody is going to solve it for them anyway.
 
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Wait a second. Why are you talking about a documentary about Palestine in this thread and what has this to do with Yemen, GCC or Al-Qaeda?

Yes, you do but for some strange reason you are not willing to tell it here. Fair enough.

I have watched enough of documentaries about Palestine and quite frankly I am sick and tired of that conflict. Let the Israelis and Palestinians deal with it alone. Nobody is going to solve it for them anyway.

Give you simple logic ' powerful always oppressed poor and weak ". Hope you understand now. Or you want to spread this dilemma on many pages ???
 
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Give you simple logic ' powerful always oppressed poor and weak ". Hope you understand now. Or you want to spread this dilemma on many pages ???

Dear I do not understand what you are writing or what this has to do with anything?! Read your first post in this thread again.

What has Palestine and some documentary to do with the topic?
 
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