Yemenite War of 1972 explained

Conflict:First Yemenite War
Partof:the Cold War and the Arab Cold War
Date:26 September – 19 October 1972
Place:North Yemen–South Yemen border
Result:
  • Cairo Agreement
  • No territorial changes
  • Two Yemens pledge ambition to unify
Combatant1:
Supported By:
    Combatant2:
    Supported By:
    Commander1: Abdul Rahman al-Eryani
    Ali Abdullah Saleh
    Commander2: Abdul Fattah Ismail

    The First Yemenite War was a short military conflict between the Yemen Arab Republic (YAR; North Yemen) and the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY; South Yemen).[1]

    Background

    South Arabian League (SAL) rebels attacked positions in eastern South Yemen, arriving from Saudi Arabia on February 20, 1972.[2] The rebels were defeated by South Yemen government troops on February 24, 1972, with some 175 rebels killed during the military hostilities.[2] Prime Minister Ali Nasir Muhammad survived an assassination attempt by SAL rebels on May 22, 1972.[2] Six persons were sentenced to death for plotting to overthrow the government on July 9, 1972.[2] Saudi Arabia continued to oppose South Yemen and supported the Northern Yemeni troops in the upcoming struggle.

    Conflict

    The war, initiated by North Yemen,[3] started on 26 September 1972,[4] the tenth anniversary of the start of the North Yemen Civil War. A force composed of members of different political groups and exiled tribesmen from South Yemen, equipped with Alvis Saladin armoured cars provided by Libya and artillery donated by the North Yemeni military, invaded South Yemen in the Qatabah area. In response, the South Yemenis brought several of their battalions to the area of the border with the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen). The South Yemeni air force (PDRYAF) also started bombing the areas invaded by the Northerners, and their military positions. Over the course of one such mission, on 30 September, a PDRYAF MiG-17 fighter was shot down and its pilot killed. In the end, South Yemeni counterattacks supported by air strikes caused over 200 casualties to the invaders, and recovered all of the lost territory. Overall, during the short war, the Southern military demonstrated its capability to run well-planned operations. Its logistics system proved adequate, and the air force's actions in ground-attack and supply missions were deemed effective. During the conflict, the Yemen Arab Republic (North) was supplied by Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, Iran, the United Kingdom and the United States and the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South) by the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Iraq, Libya and Cuba.

    Aftermath

    Cairo Agreement of 1972

    The fighting was short-lived; the war ended 23 days later, on 19 October, by a ceasefire. This was followed by the Cairo Agreement of 28 October, which put forward a plan to unify the two countries in a "republican, national and democratic" state, based on "free and direct" elections.

    Hostilities in late 1970s

    See main article: NDF Rebellion and Yemenite War of 1979. South Yemen instigated and funded a broad-based opposition movement in the north, the National Democratic Front (NDF), during the mid-1970s.[5]

    See also

    References

    Bibliography

    Notes and References

    1. Gause, Gregory, Saudi-Yemeni relations: domestic structures and foreign influence, Columbia University Press, 1990, page 98
    2. Web site: 32. South Yemen (1967-1990).
    3. Book: Couland, Jacques . fr . Genèse et étapes de l'unité yéménite . Revue des mondes musulmans et de la Méditerranée . 67 . 1993 . 67 . 79–93 . 10.3406/remmm.1993.1589 . facsimile . 18 December 2019.
    4. Book: Lagadec, Jean . fr . La fin du conflit yéménite . Revue française de science politique . 24 . 2 . April 1974 . 344–355 . 10.3406/rfsp.1974.418679.
    5. Web site: Yemen - the age of imperialism | Britannica.