The “Houthis” (known officially as the Ansarallah) is a broad grassroots movement with only a few defined political keypoints. This is deliberate, as the movement seeks to incorporate and represent the Yemeni people in its entirety across both Islamic and political differences. The movement has a right-wing, a centre-wing and a left-wing, each organized into separate unions and interest groups. For example, the left-wing is organized into what is called the “Cultural Front Against the Aggression”, just to be very specific.

Origins

The Houthi movement was founded in the 1990s by Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi, a member of Yemen’s Zaidi Shia minority, which makes up about one-third of the population. Hussein was killed by Yemeni soldiers in 2004, and the group is now led by his brother Abdul Malik.

The Zaidis, once a powerful force in north Yemen, were sidelined during the 1962-70 civil war and then further alienated in the 1980s as Salafist Sunni ideals gained prominence across the border in Saudi Arabia, which exported the ideology to Yemen. In response, Zaidi clerics began to militarise their followers against Riyadh and its allies.

The intermittent insurgency gained support from Shia Yemenis fed up with the corruption and cruelty of the long-time authoritarian president and Saudi ally, Ali Abdullah Saleh, particularly during the aftermath of 9/11 and the US invasion of Iraq.

On 18 June 2004 Saleh sent government forces to arrest Hussein. Hussein responded by launching an insurgency against the central government, but was killed on 10 September 2004, the insurgency continue intermittently until a ceasefire in 2010. During this prolonged conflict, the Yemeni army and air force was used to suppress the Houthi rebellion in northern Yemen. The Saudis joined these anti-Houthi campaigns, but the Houthis won against both Saleh and the Saudi army.

Later, the Houthis participated in the 2011 Yemeni Revolution, as well as the ensuing National Dialogue Conference (NDC). However, they rejected the provisions of the November 2011 Gulf Cooperation Council deal on the ground that “it divide[d] Yemen into poor and wealthy regions” and also in response to assassination of their representative at NDC.

The “Houthis” ceased being a rebel group in late 2014 with the advent of the September 21st Revolution and the signing of the UN-sponsored Peace & National Partnership Agreement.

Prior to 2014, the group could indeed be described as a rebel movement as it fought 6 consecutive wars against the corrupt Saudi-backed government of Ali Abdullah Saleh. In September 2014, when the “Houthis” entered Sana’a to topple said government, more than 2/3rds of the entire Yemeni Armed Forces switched and took their side instead of the side of the government, giving the “Houthis” access to missile stockpiles and heavy weapons.

There are currently two competing governments in Yemen, one based in the constitutional capital Sana’a, and one de-facto based in Aden - although the Aden-based government remains unable to exercise its authority there. The “internationally-recognized government” based in Aden doesn’t actually operate from within Yemen, but from a shadow cabinet based in the luxurious Ritz Carlton hotel in Riyadh where they’ve been exiled since February 2015.

Their direct authority is limited to warlord figures and tribal factions doing their bidding, representing less than 15% of Yemen’s total population. In turn, the so-called “Houthi rebels” are part of what is called the Government of National Salvation, which exercises direct authority over 85% of Yemen’s entire population.

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  • Mokey [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    All my Venezuelan friends came out for Israel when the conflict started again. But nothing for the Palestinians. I can tell they dont follow politics at all, but like maybe when they complain about Venezuela… maybe take a large grain of salt.

    The refugees from Venezuela, theyre calling them malandros, which is basically just bad poor people who are ignorant and do crime. My Venezuelan friends hate them and are afraid of them.

    Maybe they have a good reason for it, most of them have stories of getting mugged, someone being kidnapped or a bus they were on being robbed but it seems to parallel how Americans treat black people in this country. Seen as lazy and stupid instead of generationally oppressed and traumatized. But like why would someone come to cold as fuck US, literally thousands of miles to the border for free shit, beg, do nothing and cause crimes. They also are jealous of the free rent subsidy that the asylum claimers are getting since they came here legitimately as students. I don’t think my Venezuelans see them as people which is kind of worrying.

    I can see why a socialist government was a popular option, Venezuela sounded like desperate classist US puppet state.

    The Palestinian genocide is the most naked and obvious demonstration of how the world works. It’s not a both sides thing and there’s some way these guys are getting information that tells them this.

    Like fine have criticisms of the Venezuelan government, I honestly dont think its perfect and corruption probably does exist but dont also show your ass here on how politically illiterate you are. I feel like it makes a case that people who flee socialism don’t really have a good grasp on the world at large and are just reacting to their immediate situation.