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Soviet Détente Excludes Yemen
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# : |
14234 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1988 |
2,818 Words |
| Author
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Avigdor Haselkorn Avigdor Haselkorn is a senior analyst for Analytical
Assessments Corporation. |
In 1986, when civil war broke out in South Yemen--the Soviet Union's most important Gulf ally--Moscow was not visibly concerned; both sides were avowedly Marxist.
On one side was Ali Nasser Muhammad, leader of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY), who was determined to improve relations with his pro-Western neighbors. On the other was former President Abdel Fattah Ismail, who blocked Ali's every move in that direction.
What erupted on January 13 and continued until Ali fled the country on January 24 was a bloody battle that left an estimated 10,000 Yemenis, including Ismail, dead. Journalists could not enter Aden until after the fighting ceased and had to rely on diplomatic third sources. Foreigners huddled on the beaches, waiting to be rescued; eventually they were picked up by British and Soviet ships.
What other role the Soviets played is not exactly known. What is known is that Ismail had recently returned from exile in the Soviet Union and, after arriving in Aden, curried favor with the country's top brass, including Vice President Ali Ahmed Nasser Antar.
Although the courts have determined that Ali's guards fired the first shots, few analysts doubt that a coup had been planned by Ismail and backed by Moscow. Since then, Western coverage of Soviet involvement in the PDRY has declined markedly.
It appears that, with the ouster of Ali on the one hand and Gorbachev's new détente on the other, the West assumes Yemen's strategic
... (1996 of 17098 Characters)
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