Bringing Yemen's Fox to Justice: Ali Abdullah Saleh Now In Hiding, Trying To Escape The Military Operation Mobilized Against Him
31 March 2015
By Abdulrahman Al-Rashed
Ali Abdullah Saleh's son Ahmed has seen his political future go up in smoke
this week, and ultimately it is his father, the former president, who is
responsible for this. Saleh, who is allied with the Iranian-backed Houthis,
is the mastermind behind the current mayhem engulfing Yemen. Saleh, the
wounded fox, was betrayed by his own intelligence apparatus and ousted from
power in February 2012 after thousands of Yemenis took to the streets
demanding an end to his rule which had lasted 40 years and lost all semblance
of legitimacy and credibility. More than three years on, the ex-president
cannot accept that he was ousted from power, and is determined to return. But
just as he was burnt by the revolution, he has burnt the political future of
his eldest son Ahmed with his plots and intrigues seeking to return to power.
Just one week ago, Yemenis took to the streets in Sana'a calling for Ahmed
Ali Abdullah Saleh to be appointed president, with the former president, of
course, pulling strings behind the scenes.
However Saleh's machinations have been brought low following the leaking of
details of a secret message that he sent, via Ahmed, to Saudi Defense
Minister Prince Mohammed Bin Salman. This letter was leaked after Saleh
appeared on a Yemeni television channel to respond to the Saudi-led
coalition's shelling of his forces. Saleh claimed neutrality and patriotism
saying that he's always supported a political solution and that neither he,
nor his family members, have any desire to return to power.
He put on his best face for the Yemeni people, claiming to have had no
involvement in the coup against legitimate president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi,
while in reality he was behind all of this. It was these lies that prompted
Riyadh to leak the details of the secret message he sent to Prince Salman via
his son Ahmed. Al-Arabiya news channel's report aired details of how two days
before the Saudi-led military attacks began, Saleh sent his son to negotiate
a deal with the Saudis. The deal stipulated that he would be willing to
abandon the Houthis and back the Saudis in exchange for a series of
demands—all of which served his personal ambitions, not the interests of the
Yemeni people.
He demanded that the UN Security Council lift the sanctions that have been
imposed on him, including ending his travel ban and unfreezing his assets. He
also called for Riyadh to back his son Ahmed for president. Saudi Arabia
leaked this information in order to show the Yemeni people Saleh's true
colors, and demonstrate his selfishness and lust for power. Riyadh also
wanted to show how Saleh was seeking to leverage the fate of Yemen to meet
his own personal demands, an act of political blackmail. Saleh threatened to
continue his alliance with the Houthis and take full control of Yemen through
force of arms if Riyadh did not acquiesce to his selfish demands. He said he
would do everything in his power to sabotage the transitional process
sponsored by the Gulf states and the UN if his demands were not met. Saudi
Arabia refused to make the deal and launched its military campaign.
In the past, I have described Saleh as Yemen's fox. While Saleh himself once
described himself as ''dancing on the heads of snakes'' by being able to
govern Yemen for so long, using his own political cunning, not by
strengthening Yemen's institutes or the rule of law. Saleh was able to follow
this model of governance for decades, until the Yemeni people finally had
enough and revolted against him. He did not step down willingly but was
ultimately forced to cede power after he was injured in an attack and the
issue was practically taken out of his hands. He sought medical treatment in
Saudi Arabia, and from Saudi Arabia saw Yemen transition into a new political
phase. But unable to accept this, he returned to Yemen and conspired against
it, allying with the Iranian-backed Houthis to create chaos across the
country, sabotaging Yemen and threatening the entire Middle East by placing
the Gulf on a collision course with Iran.
Saleh's cunning failed to tempt the Saudis. Indeed, Riyadh is well aware of
the former president's sly ways. The Saudis decided that the best thing for
Yemen, and the region, would be a political solution and therefore moved
ahead with a national reconciliation project backed by the UN, as this would
be the only guarantee for the safety and security of all Yemenis, not just
the Saleh family. This option would also have been better for Saleh, if the
Yemeni fox had agreed to it. Engaging in national reconciliation for the sake
of Yemen's stability, instead of sabotaging it, would have turned him into a
true Yemeni statesman and father figure, and would also have secured the
future of his son Ahmed who conceivably could have become one of the possible
future leaders of the country.
However Saleh in his short-sightedness and stupidity spurned this option and
simultaneously destroyed his son Ahmed's leadership hopes, both now and in
the future. He failed to calculate the Saudi reaction. He sought to use the
Houthis, confident that they would be the muscle to his cunning, that like
Hezbollah in Lebanon they would assassinate, destroy and eradicate any
rivals, while allowing him to take power.
However, he was surprised by the decisive Saudi response and has realized
that this will not be so easy—Saudi Arabia is wiser and more decisive than he
imagined. Saleh bet against foreign military intervention in Yemen, and he
has now lost that bet. He thought that inter-Gulf differences would prohibit
any unified military stance. He was wrong. He thought that the Americans
would reject any Saudi intervention in order to avoid upsetting the Iranians,
particularly in light of the ongoing nuclear negotiations in Geneva. He was
wrong again. Saleh was taken completely by surprise by the extent of the
military and political cooperation that has been brought about to oppose his
alliance with the Houthis. Operation Decisive Storm has militarily brought
together the Qataris and the Emiratis, while also gaining the support of the
Egyptians and Turkey.
Saleh also saw the Americans rush to publicly support the campaign with US
President Obama calling Saudi King Salman to personally voice support for the
intervention. Washington is even providing intelligence and logistical
assistance. The most recent Arab League summit also clearly backed the
military campaign and voiced complete support for Yemen's legitimate
President Hadi. He received a standing ovation as he delivered a speech to
the conference on behalf of the Yemeni people.
The Yemeni fox gambled, and lost. He is now in hiding, trying to escape the
military operation that has been mobilized against him, while Yemen's own
tribal forces are also pursuing him on the ground in order to bring him to
justice.
Al Rashed is the general manager of
Al -Arabiya television. He is also the former editor-in-chief of Asharq Al-
Awsat, and the leading Arabic weekly magazine, Al Majalla. He is also a
senior Columnist in the daily newspapers of Al Madina and Al Bilad. He is a
US post-graduate degree in mass communications. He has been a guest on many
TV current affairs programs. He is currently based in Dubai.