by Shlomo Brom and Yoel Guzan
-- the case of Yemen shows that the forces opposing Iran – the Sunni coalition, the US and its allies, and even Israel – have the tools to confront the possible ramifications of the nuclear agreement. These reasons make it important to maintain an ongoing, in-depth dialogue about cooperation and coordination to contain Iran and limit its influence.
In
 both the media and the prevalent discourse within the political and 
security community, Iran commands the image of a strong, unwavering 
regional power, scoring success after success in its quest for regional 
hegemony. However, the conflict in Yemen between Saudi Arabian-led 
forces and the Houthis, supported by Iran, offers a more balanced view 
of Iran’s strengths and weaknesses, i.e., the limits of its power. This 
understanding is important when trying to assess the implications of the
 nuclear agreement with Iran and the steps that must be taken to curb 
the possible negative ramifications of the expected improvement in 
Iran’s economic situation.
|  | 
| 
Yemeni supporters of the  
Houthi 
rebel movement  
during a rally to protest  
against a military offensive  
by
 a Saudi-led coalition,  
Sanaa, August 11, 2015.  
Photo: Mohammed Huwais /
 AFP | 
The revolts that broke out in the 
course of the Arab Spring, however, evolved into civil wars, generally 
between Sunnis and Shiites or their allies, such as the Alawites in 
Syria. These conflicts joined the conflict in Iraq between Sunnis and 
Shiites, presenting the Iranian leadership with a dilemma. It is 
difficult for the Iranian regime not to support Shiites without damaging
 its internal legitimacy. On the other hand, an ethnic war between 
Sunnis and Shiites in which Iran steps up as the leader of the Shiite 
camp severely damages its ties to the Sunni world. Eventually Iran chose
 to align itself with the Shiites but it is paying a steep price by more
 sharply etching the fault lines between it and the other players in the
 region, deepening its isolation, and expanding its opposing regional 
coalition.
Iran supported the uprising of the 
Shiite majority in Bahrain, which sparked the first high signature 
military intervention on the part of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and other 
Gulf states in a neighboring country, under the banner of the Gulf 
Cooperation Council. Iran continues to support the Shiite majority 
government and Shiite militias in Iraq in their conflict with the 
Sunnis. It is deeply entrenched in Assad’s fight for survival in Syria, 
along with Hizbollah and Shiite volunteers from Iraq, Afghanistan, and 
elsewhere. In addition, Iran has supported the Houthis for many years, 
albeit to a lesser degree, with arms, training, and financial aid. All 
of this has led to the present situation in which there is a 
war-by-proxy between a Saudi Arabian-led Sunni coalition and an 
Iranian-led Shiite coalition.
Until a few months ago, Yemen looked 
like yet another Iranian success story. More than a decade ago and long 
before the Arab Spring, the Houthi movement, representing the interests 
of the Zaydi Shiites (different from the Iranian Twelver Shia), a large 
minority of the Yemeni population that has suffered economic and 
political discrimination, established a Hizbollah-style militia that 
rebelled against the central government. The ouster of Yemeni dictator 
Ali Abdullah Salah created a political vacuum that was exploited by a 
coalition of Houthis, probably Salah himself, and army forces still 
loyal to him, to seize control of Sana’a and eventually most of Yemen’s 
habitable areas. The government that replaced Salah fled to Saudi 
Arabia, and it seemed that this series of events would be crowned as 
another Iranian success.
There are two ways to look at Iran’s 
current situation. In the view more widely held, Iran is an expanding 
entity, broadening its sphere of influence and control over the region. 
As such, Iran is the de facto ruler of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen; 
the demonic Qasem Soleimani, commander of the Quds Force of the 
Revolutionary Guards, serves as Iran’s “high commissioner” in these 
nations. The other way is to see Iran as on the defensive, trying to 
protect the interest of Shiites, a minority in the Middle East. As a 
result, Iran is liable to suffer from over-extension of commitments and 
an inability to fulfill them. Yemen – unlike Syria, Iraq or Lebanon – 
does not represent an Iranian interest of a high order, although there 
is some value in having a foothold in Yemen, as it commands the Bab 
al-Mandeb Straits and borders Saudi Arabia. With Iran’s decision to 
intervene in Yemen on the side of the Shiites, the question is: are 
Syria and Yemen Iran’s Tibet or Vietnam? The truth seems to lie 
somewhere between the two, and time will tell the final results of 
Iran’s moves in these states. Of course, the results also depend on the 
actions and failures of the players trying to curb Iran.
Yemen provides an interesting lesson, 
given the relative success of the coalition of Sunni states led by Saudi
 Arabia that intervened in the fighting. The initial aerial assistance 
was followed by limited forces on the ground led by the UAE (whose army 
acquired much operational experience in Afghanistan and is considered, 
alongside the Jordanian military, to be the most skilled among the Arab 
armies), with US and local help. Thus the coalition managed to tip the 
scales of the war with the Houthis, repel them first from Aden and what 
used to be South Yemen, and force them to make a quick exit toward 
Sana’a, which could restore the legitimate government to the Yemeni 
capital. It became clear that in this situation Iran is helpless, 
because it cannot assist the Shiite player it supports. As with Bahrain,
 the limits of Iranian power were exposed. Four years ago, when the 
"Arab Spring" came to Bahrain and the primarily Shiite protests against 
the Sunni House of Khalifa peaked, Iran’s efforts to appropriate the 
achievements of the protests and materially support the rebelling 
Shiites for the most part failed.
Despite the major reservations of the 
United States about Saudi Arabia’s direct military intervention in Yemen
 and the heavy humanitarian cost, as well as skepticism regarding the 
ultimate success of the intervention, the US administration had no 
choice but to come to the Saudi side, and has provided intelligence and 
logistical support. The principal assistance, however, is the naval 
blockade the US imposed on logistical support for the Houthis. At the 
height of the nuclear talks, at its most critical stage, Iranian ships 
bearing supplies to the Houthis were forced to turn back after the US 
threatened to intercept them. It became clear that contrary to various 
forecasts, the Houthis are incapable of withstanding the aerial force of
 Saudi Arabia and its allies or the limited UAE and local anti-Iranian 
ground forces), and Iran is powerless to help them. To be sure, the 
Yemeni story is not yet over; the country is still in a state of chaos 
and vulnerable to Iranian exploitation. The Houthi rebellion will 
continue unless there is a political solution, and al-Qaeda and the 
Islamic State have an opening under such conditions. Nonetheless, it was
 a clear demonstration of the limits of Iran’s power.
The nuclear agreement with Iran has 
sparked much concern about the financial resources Iran will have at its
 disposal once the sanctions are lifted. Most experts agree that the 
agreement has not prompted Iran to change its fundamental political or 
ideological approach and that it will continue to support its regional 
proxies, try to expand its sphere of influence in the Middle East, 
oppose the influence of the United States and the West in the region, 
and continue to show extreme hostility toward Israel. Presumably, then, 
Iran will use its newfound resources to promote these aims. Nonetheless,
 the case of Yemen shows that the forces opposing Iran – the Sunni 
coalition, the US and its allies, and even Israel – have the tools to 
confront the possible ramifications of the nuclear agreement. These 
reasons make it important to maintain an ongoing, in-depth dialogue 
about cooperation and coordination to contain Iran and limit its 
influence.
From Israel’s point of view, this 
understanding should drive it to renew, at the earliest possible 
opportunity, the close strategic dialogue with the US, and focus on 
agreements over the steps required to confront Iran and its allies and 
stop its subversive efforts. This would include US aid to strengthen the
 capabilities Israel needs to this end. This should be done in tandem 
with independent US actions to stop Iran’s support for its allies, which
 in many cases – such as Hizbollah – violate UN Security Council 
resolutions. At the same time, Israel’s leadership must acknowledge that
 it will be impossible to give real meaning to such a dialogue and 
expand cooperation with the Sunni Arab states without paying a price, 
both in terms of a new attitude to the agreement with Iran and in terms 
of dealing with the Palestinian issue.
Shlomo Brom and Yoel Guzan
Source: http://www.inss.org.il/index.aspx?id=4538&articleid=10609
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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