Yemen model

The Yemen Model was the rubric for the Obama Administration's attempts to neutralize foreign terrorist groups hostile to the United States.

The situation in Yemen as of July 2018:
  Controlled by Houthis and Saleh loyalists
  Controlled by Hadi loyalists
  Controlled by al-Qaeda and Ansar al-Sharia

Strategy

US President Barack Obama often cited the Yemen Model as his vision for dealing with insurgent groups.[1][2]

Under the Yemen Model, the United States provided weapons, logistics, transportation and cash to a local proxy force, while committing no or few US troops.[3] The United States also carried out air strikes and targeted killings of suspected opposition leaders.

Naming

Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, President of Yemen from 2012-2015 and the United States' man in Sana'a

The model was named after the conduct of the United States' continuing conflict in Yemen. The US wanted to minimize the ability of the Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula group to attack US territory, while at the same time, the Obama Administration wanted to commit as few resources to the fight as possible.[4]

The United States picked a proxy force (in this case, tribes allied with government leader Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi), armed and trained them, and used them as a ground force against Al-Qaeda factions in exchange for US aid to the regime, totaling more than $600 million.[5] The United States also conducted a significant low-tempo air and drone campaign starting in 2009. The US also occasionally launched commando raids inside Yemen and did base some military personnel in and around al-Annad air base in the south of the country.[6]

The Obama Administration often defended its actions in Yemen as effective, and a model for other conflicts.[7][8][9]

Other American conflicts

During the early stages of the current American conflict in Iraq, Obama cited the Yemen Model as the inspiration for the conduct of the war.[10][11] He went so far as to mention Yemen as a model for success during his first speech about the new war in September 2014.[12]

The Administration also defended its efforts in Somalia as an outgrowth of the strategy.[13]

gollark: (Software defined radios. They can tune to large ranges of frequencies, and do the (de)modulation on a computer instead of specialized hardware. I have a £30 SDR receiver which can receive anything between 24MHz and ~1.7GHz, though it's obviously limited a lot by antennas)
gollark: <@229624651314233346> I'm pretty sure you're wrong about the "radios use one crystal for each band" thing, given the existence of SDRs.
gollark: <@229624651314233346> Install potatOS today!
gollark: Actually, you may want to use LoRa directly and just fix it at a low data rate or something, not LoRaWAN. I've never actually used it, I just know it seems a reasonable option for this.
gollark: The range isn't anywhere near as good as you would get with some sort of high-powered HF transceiver, but you can skip the legal wotsits, and LoRaWAN stuff is available as cheap modules IIRC.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.