Saqr Abo Hasan
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Throughout the considerable history of internal conflicts in Yemen, the influential role of tribes has been critical in shaping the outcomes of external wars and internal power struggles.
These ancient tribal structures, deeply embedded in Yemen's social fabric and military dynamics, have played kingmaker roles in times of conflict – even during periods when the state, with its superior military and security apparatuses, was involved, as seen in the Six Saada Wars.
Spanning from 2004 to 2010, those wars pitted government forces against Yemen's Ansarallah resistance movement. But each side could only come to the fight with their own set of tribal allies.
Over the years, and especially today, Yemeni tribes in the northern regions – where the Houthi clan is based – have evolved into an "inexhaustible reservoir of fighters," embodying a formidable force that can be mobilized under the right political and social conditions.
As Yemeni writer Ali Abdullah al-Dhayani points out, these particular Yemeni tribes are "natural warriors, as their men – and even women in some areas – carry weapons as part of daily life."
The Hashid and Bakil tribes
Two prominent tribal confederations, Hashid (led by the Al-Ahmar family) and Bakil (led by the Abu Lahoum family), stand out as the most potent forces in Yemen's military, civil, and executive spheres. The Hashid tribe's clout has helped it secure four seats in the Yemeni House of Representatives for the sons of its late leader, Abdullah al-Ahmar.
Meanwhile, Saba Abu Lahoum, the scion of the Abu Lahoum family, now leads the Bakil tribe, inheriting the mantle from his father, Sinan Abu Lahoum, who passed away in 2021.
For decades, the Al-Ahmar and Abu Lahoum families have vied for the prestigious position of "Sheikh of the Sheikhs of Yemen," a title that has oscillated between them depending on prevailing political winds.
The loose alliance forged between the Hashid and Bakil encompasses the majority of tribes across northern and eastern Yemen, wielding significant influence. It is worth noting that Ansarallah belongs to the Bakil confederation, while late former president Ali Abdullah Saleh's Sanhan clan belongs to Hashid.
According to a study by Iraqi researcher Nizar al-Abadi, published on the Al-Mutamar.net website, which is affiliated with the Saleh-affiliated General People's Congress Party (GPC) in Yemen, "The number of Yemeni tribes is estimated at 200–168 of them are in the north and the rest in the south, with the majority of them living in mountainous areas."
Tribalism in politics
Successive governments in Yemen have historically sought to exert control over the tribes, employing various strategies to secure their allegiance. One notable example is Saleh's establishment of the "Tribal Affairs Authority" in the early 1980s, through which monthly salaries and bonuses were distributed to numerous tribal leaders across the country to ensure the alignment of their interests with Saleh's ruling GPC.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a leader of one of the tribes informs The Cradle that this government approach encouraged materialism and corruption within tribal leadership, effectively buying their loyalty for the Saleh government:
Joining the Tribal Affairs Authority was based on loyalty to the regime. It included hundreds of sheikhs who had no influence, while opponents of the ruling party were punished by being deprived of salaries. Sometimes, marginal figures were pushed to assume the leadership of the tribe.
After Saleh stepped down in early 2012, there were calls to abolish the Tribal Affairs Authority and invest its annual budget of around 13 billion Yemeni riyals into national infrastructure. But the successor government to Mohammed Salem Basindwa decided against this. It resumed Saleh's tried-and-tested financial approach "to win over the tribal leaders," according to a tribal source.
During Yemen's 2011 'Arab Spring,' Saleh established a new entity – the "Yemen Tribal Council" – to contain the growing tribal preference for the opposition, especially after several of these leaders, including Hashid Chief Sadiq al-Ahmar, publicly supported the popular uprising against his government.
According to political activist Shaalan al-Abrat, the tribes' involvement provided significant momentum to the so-called February 11 revolution in some Yemeni cities, such as Dhamar (100 km south of Sanaa).
In late 2012, the city of Saada in northern Yemen, an Ansarallah stronghold, witnessed the emergence of the "Tribal Popular Cohesion Council," which included tribal leaders supportive of the resistance movement. The council quickly expanded to include all tribes in and outside areas controlled by the current Ansarallah-led government based in the capital, Sanaa.
As Dr Abdo al-Bahsh, head of the political department at the Yemeni Studies and Research Center, describes the development:
[This council] was imposed by the Yemeni political reality and attempts to subject Yemen to American control ... [It] expresses the aspirations of the Yemeni people and their national will, far from sectarian, ethnic, regional, and narrow partisanship.
The council is headed by Dhaif Allah Rassam, a tribal leader from Saada Governorate. It has branches and representatives in all Yemeni governorates currently under Sanaa's control. Importantly, its influence extends to tribes outside their area of control, such as in the Shabwa, Ma'rib, and Al-Dhalea areas of Yemen.
Bolstering the argument that the tribes play a key role in dispute resolution, the council's Dhamar branch head, Abbas al-Amdi, says that throughout the years of aggression against Yemen, the council was instrumental in strengthening internal unity, ending tribal revenge wars, and supplying the fighting fronts with tribal fighters.
Ansarallah's political ascendancy
Yemen's political factions have long leveraged tribal affiliations to enhance popular support. The Saudi-backed Islah Party, affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, strategically aligned itself with tribal leaders upon its establishment in 1990, with Abdullah bin Hussein al-Ahmar, chief of the Hashid tribe, assuming its presidency.
The assertion of tribal authority over state influence was exemplified by Hamid al-Ahmar – brother of Hashid's leader – when asked in an interview on Al-Jazeera whether he was afraid of returning to Sanaa after voicing support for Saleh's opposition: "Whoever has Sadiq [al-Ahmar] as his chief, and Hashid as his tribe, would not be afraid."
Tribal influence was strikingly evident during Saleh's ousting through the 2012 Gulf Initiative, in which a coalition of Yemeni tribal and political factions orchestrated that delicate transition of power. Around this time, Ansarallah capitalized on its tribal networks to expand its movement's influence, particularly in the country's northern regions. It gradually extended its reach across Yemen in an alliance with Saleh's GPC and the armed forces.
Ansarallah's adept handling of tribal structures facilitated their rise, merging ideology with tribalism to galvanize support. This symbiotic relationship contributed to their military and popular ascendancy, as noted by Yemeni political analyst Abdul Salam al-Nahari:
[Before 2012], finding someone who believed in Ansarallah was difficult due to years of misinformation. However, after 2015, society began to become aware of Ansarallah, especially among tribes exhausted by wars and internal conflicts … After the war in Yemen, the tribe has now become more cohesive after playing a major role in community steadfastness and in supplying the fighting fronts with weapons, money, and men.
Tribe-centric strategies
Nahari points out that the Saudi-led aggression against Yemen put the country at a crossroads: either remaining under American guardianship or breaking away from it at any cost. "The people of Yemen chose independence," he declares.
The foreign aggression united Yemenis during a time when Ansarallah was encouraging the advancement of many tribal leaders to the front ranks and giving them the opportunity to lead.
Examples abound. In the Al-Bayda region of central Yemen, tribal leader Saleh bin Saleh al-Wahbi founded the "Wahbi Brigades" in 2016. After his death in 2021, his son Bakil succeeded him.
In the Al-Razzamat region, north of Saada Governorate near the southern border of Saudi Arabia, tribal leader and member of the House of Representatives Abdullah Aydah al-Razami threw his weight behind Ansarallah Founder Hussein Badr al-Din al-Houthi, and his tribe fought a fierce war against government forces after the latter's killing.
During the foreign aggression against Yemen, his son Yahya al-Razami was appointed commander of the Hamidan axis forces and assumed command of the "Death Brigades," the elite forces affiliated with Ansarallah.
The son played a vital role in the Victory from God operation in 2019 when his forces captured thousands of soldiers loyal to the Yemeni government in Riyadh and seized a vast amount of weapons and military equipment.
Al-Nahari asserts that "fighting in any area where there is no popular incubator is like fighting on open ground." Ansarallah has actively sought to create supportive environments in strategic areas. By neutralizing certain tribes through treaties and agreements, such as in Marib, Ansarallah has effectively extended its influence with minimal combat cost, illustrating its strategic understanding of Yemen's tribal politics.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Saqr Abo Hasan is a Yemeni journalist and the executive director of Saqr Media Company, which specializes in media and advertising.
Neo-Nazi ideology has become one of the main protagonists of political and social life in Ukraine since the 2014 coup d'état. And that's a fact.
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