Yemen’s
Houthis Aren’t Iranian Puppets
By Thomas
Juneau
May 19,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Washington
Post"
- For years, mounting instability had many
predicting the collapse of Yemen. These
forecasts became reality in 2014 when years of
accumulated tension pushed the country into civil
war. On one side is an alliance of the
Houthis, a northern movement that has been
fighting the government since 2004, and troops and
militias loyal to a former president, Ali Abdullah
Saleh. On the other side are supporters of the
government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who
was overthrown by the Houthis in early 2015.
The war
intensified in March 2015 when a coalition of
10 states led by Saudi Arabia launched a campaign of
airstrikes against the Houthi-Saleh coalition.
Riyadh’s
declared objectives are to roll back the Houthis
and reinstate Hadi. Saudi Arabia claims that the
Houthis are an Iranian proxy, leading it to
frame the war as an effort to counter Iran’s
influence. The Saudis are not the only ones to label
the Houthis puppets of Iran. Politicians and media
in the West, in particular, also frequently describe
them as
Iranian proxies.
Yet
as I argue in a recent article in the May 2016
issue of International Affairs, the Chatham House
journal, Tehran’s support for the Houthis is
limited, and its influence in Yemen is marginal. It
is simply inaccurate to claim that the Houthis are
Iranian proxies.
Instead,
the war in Yemen is driven by
local grievances and competition for power among
Yemeni actors. The Houthis and Saleh want to
overturn the political order that emerged after the
uprisings of 2011: Saleh wants to return to power,
having lost the presidency in the wake of popular
protests, while the Houthis want a greater say in
national affairs. In other words, the Houthis want
in, Saleh wants back in, and the Hadi bloc wants to
keep them both out.
Iran’s limited support for the Houthis
According
to a 2015 report to the U.N. Security Council Iran
Sanctions Committee, Iran probably started providing
small amounts of weapons to the Houthis in 2009
— five years after the first round of fighting
between the Houthis and government forces. In 2011,
U.S. officials — who until then had been dismissive
of such accusations — started to
acknowledge that Iran was likely responsible for
the delivery of automatic rifles, grenade launchers
and cash, probably in the millions of dollars.
The
Houthi’s takeover of Sanaa, Yemen’s capital, in
September 2014 prompted Iran to increase its
support. It now appears that small numbers — perhaps
dozens — of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
officers, with assistance from Lebanese Hezbollah,
have set up a
train and equip program for the Houthis. There
have also been reports of
intensifying shipping activity between Iran and
Yemen.
This
assistance, however, remains limited and far from
sufficient to make more than a marginal difference
to the balance of forces in Yemen, a country
awash with weapons. There is therefore no
supporting evidence to the claim that Iran has
bought itself any significant measure of influence
over Houthi decision-making.
Common interests, not common faith
What’s in
it for Tehran? Iran supports groups throughout the
Middle East when two conditions are met. The Islamic
Republic, first, takes advantage of instability to
penetrate weak polities. Second, it targets
dissatisfied political parties or militias who
oppose, violently or non-violently, the domestic or
regional status quo. In doing so, Iran wants to gain
access to an area that it can later use as a
launching pad to pressure its regional rivals,
especially Saudi Arabia and Israel, and to oppose
the regional U.S. presence. It also seeks to boost
its deterrence, by arming its partners so that they
could retaliate against U.S. interests or partners
in the event of a war. More broadly, Iran uses these
ties to build influence in weak polities, aiming to
position itself as an indispensable regional power.
What brings
Iran and the Houthis together is not a common Shiite
faith, as is often implied in Western media, where
one regularly reads references to the
Houthis as “Shia.” This is not technically
inaccurate: The
Houthis are Zaydis, a small branch of Shiism
distinct from the Twelver Shiism practiced by a
majority of the region’s Shiites. It is misleading,
however: Their beliefs diverge significantly, and
many Zaydis in Yemen are opposed to the Houthis.
Rather, a
common dissatisfaction with the status quo drives
their partnership. Iran opposes the regional order,
dominated by the United States and its partners,
especially Saudi Arabia and Israel. At the same
time, the Houthis oppose the Hadi government, itself
backed by Saudi Arabia. Many of the Houthis’
domestic rivals in Yemen, such as the Islah party,
moreover, back the Hadi government and are supported
by Riyadh. There is, in sum, a convergence of
interests among the Houthis, Iran and former
president Saleh, on one side, and the pro-status quo
forces of the remnants of the Hadi government, its
domestic backers and Saudi Arabia, on the other. |