Monday, February 27, 2012

#1145 Pipes blog at NRO: "Four Down: Saleh No Longer Yemen's President?"

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February 26, 2012

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Four Down: Saleh No Longer Yemen's President?

by Daniel Pipes
February 25, 2012
Cross-posted from National Review Online: The Corner

http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/2012/02/four-down-saleh-no-longer-yemen-president

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Three Arab dictators-for-life lost power in 2011: Ben Ali of Tunisia on January 14, Mubarak of Egypt on February 11, and Qaddafi of Libya on October 20. Now, the first Arab dictator of 2012 seems to be down: Ali Abdullah Saleh of Yemen.

Abed Rabu Mansour Hadi - Yemen's new president in fact as well as in name?

Seems because his has been a protracted and contorted process that included Saleh's resignation on November 23, elections on February 21, and the festive swearing in today of his successor, Abed Rabu Mansour Hadi. Following the "Pipes rule of Arab elections" (namely: If you know the result ahead of time, you are voting for the real powerbroker; if you don't know the result in advance, then you are voting for a position that hardly matters), that Hadi was the only candidate for president suggests he has real power. By the way, he was the country's vice president since 1994 and is field marshal of the Yemeni armed forces.

But, as Laura Kasinof of the New York Times puts it, Saleh "still wields considerable influence. His relatives control most of the military and government security agencies, and it remains to be seen how independent Mr. Hadi, a longtime Saleh loyalist, will be." So, Hadi's installation might be a gambit for Saleh to retain control. We shall see.

Who's number five? Bashar al-Assad of Syria. After that, it's unclear who's number six, but I bet on a newly-wobbly King Abdullah II of Jordan, thanks to his incompetence in dealing with the growing Islamism of his Bedouin political base. (February 25, 2012)

Related Topics: Persian Gulf & Yemen This text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is presented as an integral whole with complete information provided about its author, date, place of publication, and original URL.


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