Power Struggle over Socotra  

Dragon trees on Socotra (Shutterstock)

by Giorgio Cafiero

Throughout the Yemeni civil war, President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s government and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have been nominal allies. Yet relations between the two have been, to say the least, tense due to conflicting visions for the future of Yemen once the dust settles.

The UAE supports southern separatists in Yemen who threaten the post-1990 north-south unity which Hadi seeks to preserve. There have even been clashes between southern separatists and Yemeni government forces. Additionally, Hadi has also partnered with the local Muslim Brotherhood franchise, al-Islah, which Abu Dhabi considers a terrorist organization and has sought to counter in various ways, including targeted assassination campaigns.

Yemen’s sparsely populated archipelago governorate of Socotra—four islands with otherworldly plant life that made it a UNESCO world natural heritage site in 2008—is a geopolitical flashpoint between Yemen’s UN-recognized government and Abu Dhabi. Earlier this month, Hadi’s administration condemned the Emiratis for sending approximately 100 armed Yemeni separatists to Socotra from UAE-controlled Aden. In response, the UAE Foreign Minister Anwar Gargash labeled the accusation “fake news.”

Socotra’s sovereignty has been a point of conflict between the two governments before. Last year, the UAE deployed tanks and troops to Hadibo (Socotra’s capital and main port) while then-Yemen’s Prime Minister Ahmed Obeid Bin Daghar was paying a visit to the archipelago. Daghar condemned Abu Dhabi’s move and demanded that the Yemeni public voice its opposition too. In response citizens held rallies on Yemen’s mainland calling for an assertion of Yemeni sovereignty over Socotra in the face of the UAE’s perceived attempts to colonize the islands.

Hadi’s government took this issue to the United Nations Security Council. As a result, Abu Dhabi had to back down and announce its recognition of the archipelago as Yemen’s sovereign territory. To thwart an escalation of tension between Yemeni government forces and the Emiratis, Saudi Arabia deployed its troops to Socotra and the Emirati troops departed. Although this prevented an outbreak of violence, the settlement put in place last year was weak. In fact, since that episode, Emirati troops have remained in Socotra in their capacity as members of the Saudi-led coalition. According to some sources, the UAE retains its control of the archipelago’s main port and airport.

Regional Geopolitics

Although Socotra has thus far managed to escape the violent chaos that has plagued much of mainland Yemen since 2014, it remains a source of dispute among different powers struggling to assert their influence over the islands. The Emiratis’ latest escalation over Socotra also illustrates how Yemen’s political crisis is another driver of deep division within the paralyzed Gulf Cooperation Council. Not only have the Emiratis and Saudis disagreed with Oman’s neutrality in the Arab coalition’s war against the Houthi rebels, but the vision that the UAE has for Socotra and other lands in southern Yemen also pits Abu Dhabi against Riyadh. On this issue, Hadi’s administration and the kingdom agree that north-south unity must be kept, which is at odds with the agenda of the Abu Dhabi-sponsored southern separatists.

The question of Socotra has also pitted Yemenis against each other. Although Hadi has had problems with past governors of Socotra who welcomed the idea of partnering with the UAE, Socotra’s sitting governor, Ramzi Mahroos, joins Hadi in staunchly opposing the UAE’s formation of armed groups on the islands. Although Governor Mahroos has vowed to confront the Emiratis over Socotra, it’s not clear what that would entail. Officials around Hadi are currently trying to persuade the UAE to focus on combatting Houthi rebels, rather than occupying or annexing the archipelago where there is no Houthi presence or perceived threat.

The Saudis have yet to intervene this time to prevent any escalation of tensions between Abu Dhabi and Hadi’s administration. Ankara, too, has yet to condemn Abu Dhabi, even though the rivalry between Turkey and the UAE is heating up.

Resisting the UAE’s “Expansionism”

In May 2017, Hadi first called the UAE an “occupation power” in Yemen. This reflected how a significant number of his fellow Yemenis view the Emirati role in their civil war. In fact, before the current conflict broke out, Yemen had concerns about Abu Dhabi’s perceived quest to control shipping routes via Aden and the Bab al-Mandab (BAM). These fears likely explained the real reason for Yemen canceling a deal for DP World to run the port in Aden back in 2012 even though corruption was the official reason. Many Yemenis suspected that the Emiratis wanted to weaken Aden’s potential as a major Arabian Peninsula port city that could one day compete with Dubai. Today, with the UAE in de facto control of parts of Yemen, including Aden, such fears have only intensified.

The UAE’s actions vis-à-vis Socotra reveal much about how Abu Dhabi’s grander foreign policy strategies pit the Emirates against its close ally, Saudi Arabia. Abu Dhabi is willing to take bold actions that undermine Riyadh’s positions without regard to the Saudi desire to preserve Yemen’s unification. This power struggle, which is also playing out in Yemen’s easternmost al-Mahra governorate, will make it increasingly difficult for Saudi Arabia to maintain the semblance of even a remotely unified coalition.

Despite working with both the kingdom and Hadi’s government beginning in 2015 to fight the Houthi rebellion, the UAE’s leadership has interests in Yemen that extend beyond efforts to crush the Iran-allied Houthis. Such interests pertain to Abu Dhabi’s long-term geopolitical aims concerning the BAM, East Africa, and greater Indian Ocean. Furthering those interests requires the UAE, which does not have a Red Sea, Arabian Sea, Gulf of Aden, or Indian Ocean coast, to secure its strategic footholds in southern Yemen (including Socotra) and the Horn of Africa.

Located closer to Africa than the Arabian Peninsula, Socotra has been rather isolated from Yemen’s civil war over the past few years. Yet, tensions between the forces of Yemeni nationalism and an increasingly assertive UAE over Socotra’s sovereignty play out across other parts of the country. As Abu Dhabi’s “expansionist” foreign policy agenda continues in Yemen, this power struggle will put more pressure on Yemenis to choose between their fellow citizens who resist the UAE’s conduct in Yemen and the Abu Dhabi-allied militias fighting for the re-establishment of South Yemen as a nation-state.

Giorgio Cafiero

Giorgio Cafiero is the CEO and founder of Gulf State Analytics, a Washington, DC-based geopolitical risk consultancy. In addition to LobeLog, he also writes for The National Interest, Middle East Institute, and Al Monitor. From 2014-2015, Cafiero was an analyst at Kroll, an investigative due diligence consultancy. He received an M.A. in International Relations from the University of San Diego.

SHOW 2 COMMENTS

2 Comments

  1. On invitation from the Emiraitis I have just visited Socotra as part of a reconstruction program there. The Emiratis are building schools, mosques and hospitals. They are also providing training to doctors, teachers and police along with improving the infrastructure. From my perspective the socotrians were abandoned and the UAE has stepped in to build better lives for the islanders.
    Of course there are strategic reasons for UAE to base on Socotra but at least they are creating a safe environment and improving living standards to the locals.

  2. They ain’t creating shit but destroying the habitats and environment of this garden of Eden it should be left alone and I don’t know how you were allowed their to be honest nobody should go their as it is pristine and should be kept alone fuck off they don’t want your shithole civilisation keep it to your selves happiness is not materialistic it’s from within ……

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