Yemeni authorities today reported
that five soldiers and two al Qaeda-linked insurgents were killed in heavy
fighting in the country. The insurgents, members of the militant group Ansar al-Sharia which translates as Partisans
of Islamic, launched an attack against the government in 2011. The militants’ offensive
achieved minimal success with the capture of two towns located in the southern
part of the country.
Their march towards the
proverbial Promised Land was however abruptly halted by reinvigorated and
reenergised government forces, supported by the West, who have now reduced the
sum total of the insurgent’s attacks to spasmodic or intermittent occurrences.
This week’s offensive was an attempt to flush out the remnants of the militant
group, and with the post-mortem of the short-lived battle due shortly, it
remains to be seen whether the government’s pronouncements of victory stack up.
The Yemeni forces’ plight has not
been helped by another conflict in the North-east of the country in which it is
currently engaged, running concurrently with the troubles in the southern part
of the country. The latest violence follows Monday’s suicide bombing attack
which killed 11 Yemeni soldiers. The West and the U.S in particular has channelled
considerable resources, financial and otherwise, in their attempts to forestall
the march of the insurgents. The West fears that the insurgent’s success in Yemen
will be used as a platform by the militants to launch attacks the world over
hence its increased significance in the war against terror.
Often described as a failed state,
and perhaps rightly so, the country’s instability has led to a power vacuum
which in turn has been exploited by various al Qaeda splinter groups, all said
to operate under the auspices of the Yemen-headquartered al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). With Yemen
being of such strategic importance to both sides, meaning the West and Islamist
militants, one therefore wonders whether Afghanistan ’s
tag as the ‘frontline of the war on terror’ is rather misguided.
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