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Arabia
Yemen's Reformers V's The Pact of Evil
2005-06-11
In the remote country of Yemen, a determined and heroic democracy movement battles an alliance of Al Qaeda, Saddam Hussein's generals, and a corrupt regime that wields all the tools of the state. The terrorists are operating on the proceeds from gunrunning and oil sales. The reformers are operating on pure determination.

Throughout Yemeni security forces, military, businesses, and public institutions, an interlinked web of corruption and brutality is stealing Yemen's resources and attacking any Yemeni who opposes it. And the majority do oppose. All the natural enemies of the jihadis are under attack in Yemen: reformers, democrats, journalists, socialists, pluralists, Shiites, Sunnis, anti-corruption advocates, human rights workers, and more. As forces unite against them, the Yemeni people unite for democracy.

In 2003, Al Qaeda praised Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh as the only Arab leader not beholden to the West. It's clear why. Saleh has refused to freeze 143 United Nations identified terrorist affiliated bank accounts in Yemen. Some of the millions in those accounts may be proceeds from weapons sales, narcoterrorism, and oil sales. One person who might be able to provide details is Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, Saleh's half brother, prominent military commander, and reputed Al Qaeda loyalist.
Posted by:Spavirt Pheng6042

#2  A while back I tried to make sense of what is happening in Yemen in terms we would understand. Sunnis vs Shiias, socialists vs democrats, fundamentalists vs pragmatic reformers. The best I could do is that there is an unfinished civil war with shifting alliances. I didn't conclude the president was a despot, more Mubarack than Saddam, but I really don't know.
Posted by: phil_b   2005-06-11 16:37  

#1  20 years is enough, but how ofter do you hear of a dictator stepping down? Be realistic, there is only one kind of end for a dictator.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2005-06-11 11:45  

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