ADEN, Yemen — If planting a flag denotes a
territorial claim, then the assortment of
banners displayed across Aden southern
Yemen are indicative of the complex web of
players involved in attempts to control the
city.
Various flags are coiled around poles at
checkpoints, sprayed on walls, painted on
cars, stuck on ammunition clips and
cellphone covers. No single group’s leaders
or followers have yet asserted control of the
ruined city after many months of war.
Among the multitude of markers are three
national flags: Saudi Arabia’s, the United
Arab Emirates’ and the defunct socialist state
of South Yemen’s, which is now a symbol of
independence for the secessionists calling for
renewed separation from the north.
Despite all these representations of
nationhood, there is no state here or, most
notably, any sign of the Yemeni tricolor. That
flag — viewed by southerners as a vestige of
northern oppression and now aggression —
would indicate the government’s presence.
In the absence of the state, there is often
another banner in Yemen. Not for the first
time, the black rayat al-uqab flag, embraced
by Al-Qaeda and subsequently assumed by
the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL), can be spotted on walls in districts
across the city.
When the combined forces of the
predominantly northern Shia Houthis —
along with loyalists of former President Ali
Abdullah Saleh — descended on Aden in
mid-March, their pretext for war was the
city’s being a stronghold for Daesh (the
Arabic acronym for ISIL). The Houthis and
their supporters adopted the name as a
blanket term to describe Yemen’s Al-Qaeda
offshoot, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
(AQAP), as well as the more recently
emerged ISIL affiliate in Yemen. While this
appellation overstated the presence of the
two groups at the other end of the spectrum,
representatives of the Yemeni government
— who largely remain in self-imposed exile
in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia — insist Al-Qaeda
does not exist and that its presence in Aden
is a Houthi-made myth. The reality lies
somewhere in between.
Saudi-led offensive in Yemen faces
dangerous new phase
Riyadh is pushing to extend the conflict into
key areas of the country where Houthi
rebels will offer much resistance
As the last echoes of airstrikes and shelling
rippled across the city to its Arabian Sea
coastline last month and fighting drew to a
close, the void where a government should
be — along with the accompanying police
force, army and municipal institutions — lay
bare.
In its place is the motley throng of the
Southern Resistance, a fighting force made
up of local men defending their homes,
former soldiers of the socialist-era army and,
in lesser numbers, those fighting for religious
reasons, including some elements from Al-
Qaeda.
The common enemy — the Houthi-Saleh
forces that united this disparate militia — is
no longer a tangible threat. But in its wake is
a population of disgruntled armed men
looking for jobs, while AQAP and ISIL are
looking to take advantage. The combination
is potentially toxic.
“There is no single official group responsible
for the security system of Aden,” admitted
the commander in charge of the Southern
Resistance, Aidaroos al-Zoubadi, who has
been part of a group of leaders trying to
resolve the issue of who will secure the city.
While the Southern Resistance busied itself
with the military advance out of Aden into
neighboring provinces last month, it appears
the radical fighters were already thinking
ahead and planning for the postconflict
environment.
During the last few weeks of battle,
members of the Southern Resistance noticed
a surge in presence of ISIL men who
followed the push into Lahij and Abyan
provinces but, they say, never took part in
the fighting. Loitering at the rear, they
swooped in as the fighting subsided to loot
heavy weapons and ammunition left behind
when the Houthis fled. “They knew exactly
where to look,” noted one field commander
who observed the tactic repeatedly.
But in the increasingly gray area of who is
and who is not AQAP or ISIL, trying to
ascertain the actual threat posed by both
groups is a difficult task. Among the young
members of the Southern Resistance, bushy
beards and lip-hugging mustaches became
fashionable during the conflict in mocking
defiance of the Houthis’ insistence they were
all Daesh. Others describe themselves
merely as fans of radical groups rather than
fully fledged members or fighters.
The cruel twist of Aden’s conflict — sparked
by the Houthi-Saleh forces, whose stated aim
was to defeat AQAP and ISIL — is that the
war appears to have had the opposite effect.
More than four months of heavy fighting in a
city under siege that left thousands dead has
fueled the radicalization of young men and
accelerated the rise of ISIL. Extreme acts of
violence became the norm in a city where
previously only soldiers carried guns.
Although ISIL fighters never took part in the
battle for control of the city, the group’s more
openly brutal tactics, compared with Al-
Qaeda’s, appear less excessive to some who
are now familiar with bloodshed.
The Bureiqa district, also known as Little
Aden, 20 miles west of the heart of the city,
is the well-known birthplace of AQAP. Youths
there say the group is being eclipsed by the
popularity of ISIL, with a fan base fostered by
“journalists” deployed to spread ISIL’s
ideology through videos and propaganda
songs.
“ISIL is bigger, better and stronger than Al-
Qaeda now,” said Omar, 24, who became
aware of the group in Aden only after the
conflict began. With the infamous black
banner stuck on the back of his cellphone, he
gave only his first name and described
himself as a fan of ISIL rather than a
member of the group.
“ISIL is structurally stronger than Al-Qaeda in
Yemen,” noted a Yemeni expert in Islamic
groups who asked not to be named. The
veteran scholar has observed the formation
of ISIL in Yemen, which he says is based on
intelligence gathering, similar to the methods
used in Iraq and Syria. However, its
leadership in Yemen consists of foreigners
with experience garnered in Iraq and Syria.
Multiple self-proclaimed ISIL affiliates began
stating their presence in Yemen over a year
ago, with numerous splinter groups declaring
themselves in at least seven provinces since
then. The highest-profile attacks have been
in the capital, Sanaa, where ISIL has claimed
responsibility for several suicide and car
bombings against mosques in the city —
methods rejected by AQAP for their targeting
of civilians.
ISIL and AQAP have openly expressed their
differences at senior levels, with AQAP, in
keeping with Al-Qaeda’s global policy,
refusing to acknowledge ISIL as a caliphate
or to pledge allegiance to it. Although the
wave of young men who previously joined
Al-Qaeda in Yemen are now gravitating
toward ISIL, trying to separate who belongs
to which is far from straightforward,
especially since the two groups share a base
on the sun-drenched shoreline close to
Aden’s oil refinery.
Despite media reports of Al-Qaeda’s seizing
territory in Aden, neither group has control
over any of the city’s districts. But that does
not rule out the potential for them to do so in
the future. ISIL “will make a crack in the
waist of Yemen,” warned the expert,
referring to the group’s build toward taking
territory across the county.
In order to break the flow of support for ISIL,
the still largely absent and penniless Yemeni
government is in a race against time.
Thousands of UAE troops, who arrived in
Aden with tanks and armored personnel
carriers in July on a mission officially
described as one of reconstruction, are in the
process of building and training a new police
force. And thousands of Southern Resistance
fighters are hoping for paid jobs in the
fledgling security apparatus being created.
A salaried and well-trained force cannot
come quickly enough. The city is already
facing challenges from armed criminal gangs,
assassins and vigilantism as well as
splintering of the Southern Resistance as
factions and their leaders vie for positions
and territory amid the lawlessness.
Carjackings and armed robberies forced the
International Red Cross to close up shop in
recent weeks, and U.N. agencies looking to
operate in Aden are considering the option
of a boat offshore to house their workers.
Who will foot the bill for the new security
forces in southern Yemen is unclear.
Mohammed Ali Maram, the director of exiled
President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s office
in Aden, said the Saudi-led coalition will
provide the patronage for the city’s
restoration. As yet, there seems little
evidence of a sufficient flow of money to
prop up even the existing institutions needed
for the city to function. Aden’s refinery
workers have gone on strike because wages
have not been paid, and armed men from
the Southern Resistance have blocked roads
amid an increasing display of discontent over
not receiving money.
Preventing the complete collapse of security
in the city is the patience of thousands of
destitute armed men with families to
support, waiting for reimbursement — an
atmosphere ripe for manipulation by groups
such as Al-Qaeda and ISIL.
However, many observers of Yemen’s
upheavals over the years are skeptical of the
rise of ISIL. In the intricate maze of the
country’s politics, with a history of its power
players exploiting and utilizing armed
factions, it would seem implausible to many
that ISIL could emerge without some
connection to the political elites, currently at
loggerheads, whose influence has long
filtered through the country’s tribal and
military structures.
“It is certainly not impossible to think that
ISIL in Yemen could have been
manufactured to serve a political purpose,”
said Nadwa al-Dawsari, a Yemeni conflict
specialist and nonresident senior fellow at
the Project on Middle East Democracy.
The relatively new ISIL has yet to reach
critical mass in Yemen, while AQAP already
has control of one southern city, Mukalla,
which it seized in April. But it is amid the
spreading lawlessness brought on by the
current conflict as well as the competing
domestic political factions with interests to
serve that ISIL could find its greatest
prospect for fulfilling its familiar Arabic
tagline, scrawled on walls across Aden and
the rest of the region, “Remaining and
expanding.”


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