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ID154048
Title ProperToward a comprehensive solution? yemen’s two-year peace process
LanguageENG
AuthorForster, Robert
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the two years since Yemeni president ‘Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi called on the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to intervene against the expanding threat of the Huthi insurgency in March 2015, the conflict in Yemen has left more than 7,500 killed and another 18.8 million in need of humanitarian aid.1 The GCC-led intervention is only the latest phase of conflict in Yemen, which in the last 15 years has witnessed a string of armed rebellions in the north from 2004 to 2010, experienced a southern insurgency after 2009, and been the theater of American drone strikes on suspected al-Qa‘ida affiliates since 2002. Indeed, the complexity of the Yemeni conflict indicates the series of challenges faced by peace-builders and mediators in an ever-changing conflict environment.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle East Journal Vol. 71, No.3; Summer 2017: p.479-488
Journal SourceMiddle East Journal 2017-09 71, 3
Key WordsGCC ;  Peace Process ;  Comprehensive Solution