Al-Wadiah War Explained

Conflict:al-Wadiah War
Partof:Arab Cold War
Date:27 November - 6 December 1969
Place:al-Wadiah, Sharurah
Result:Saudi victory
  • al-Wadiah and Sharurah captured by Saudi forces
Combatant2:
(Air Support)
Commander1: Salim Rubai Ali
Muhammad Ali Haitham
Ali Salem al Beidh
Faisal Attas
Ali Nasir Muhammad
Ali Abdullah Maisary
Commander2: Faisal of Saudi Arabia
Sultan bin Abdulaziz
Units1: 30th Infantry Brigade
Units2: 130th Infantry Brigade

personnel
Casualties1:35 killed (Saudi claim)[1]
Casualties2:39 killed and 26 taken hostage[2] [3]

The al-Wadiah War was a military conflict which broke out on 27 November 1969 between Saudi Arabia and the People's Republic of South Yemen (PRSY) after disputes for the town of al-Wadiah on the PRSY-Saudi Arabian border. The conflict ended on 6 December when Saudi forces captured al-Wadiah.[4]

Background

The town was placed along the contentious border of South Yemen and Saudi Arabia, and had some fifteen years prior, in 1954-1955, been the site of a border dispute between the Saudis and the British.[5]

Al-Wadiah is a part of the geographic Hadhramaut region which had previously been part of the Qu'aiti Sultanate, itself part of the Protectorate of South Arabia, which had been incorporated into the People's Republic of South Yemen (PRSY) following the withdrawal of British forces from the region.[6] The PRSY therefore considered the town as part of its territory.[5] The Saudi government however saw al-Wadiah as part of their own territory, as well as a frontier in confrontations with the PRSY.[5] There were also rumors of oil and water deposits around the town, thereby aggravating the dispute.[7]

Simultaneously PRSY-Saudi relations had been incredibly tense, with Faisal of Saudi Arabia regarding the left-wing government with extreme hostility, which was in turn reciprocated by the PRSY, which supported the overthrow of the Gulf monarchies.[8] The Saudi government went so far as to fund and arm South Yemeni dissidents, and encouraged them to conduct raids across the border into South Yemen.[8] The PRSY accused the Saudi government of planning further attacks in November 1969.[8]

PRSY Advance

In November 1969, the Saudis built a road to al-Wadiah and garrisoned soldiers there, incorporating it into the Kingdom.[9] The PRSY government claimed that the Saudis had occupied al-Wadiah in order to secure potential oil reserves in the area. The Saudi government in turn accused the PRSY of seizing al-Wadiah.[8]

On 27 November 1969, PRSY regular army units advanced on, and took, the town of al-Wadiah. Saudi forces deployed in the region were limited to some tribal militias, backed by some aircraft and artillery. A small section of the PRSY force began advancing on Sharurah, but was halted.

Having been informed of the PRSY advance, King Faisal ordered Sultan bin Abdulaziz, the Minister of Defense and Aviation, to expel PRSY forces. Sultan commissioned all units in the southern region for the task of attempting to reoccupy al-Wadiah within two days.

Saudi counterattack

The first phase (air strikes)

The initial part of the conflict was largely limited to aerial battles, with a series of air clashes taking place in late November and early December.[8] During this initial period Iraq and Jordan attempted to mediate an end to the conflict.[8]

The Royal Saudi Air Force also conducted a series of aerial bombardments on Yemeni positions. On one instance, English Electric Lightnings flown by Saudi and Pakistani pilots from Khamis Airbase launched devastating rocket attacks on Yemeni supply lines.[10] [11] [12] These attacks continued over the course of two days, initially being directed at PRSY Army forces in the region, and later specifically at the PRSY leadership, whilst also attacking PRSY logistics.

The second phase (ground attack)

At 9:45 in the morning, the Saudi ground offensive began advancing on Yemeni positions on two axes: A battalion of Saudi National Guard units, along with some other forces, advanced on Yemeni positions from the West. A second group, composed of exiled Yemenis and Saudi border guards, advanced on Yemeni positions from the east.

During the attack PRSY forces were divided into two pockets. A PRSY counterattack failed to unite the pockets. The following day clashes began at dawn, and continued throughout the day. The commander of the PRSY Brigade was killed in the fighting, following which PRSY forces began to withdraw. Saudi forces harassed PRSY forces during the retreat, although stopped at the border under orders.

The third phase (reinforcement)

Saudi forces then proceeded to take up defensive positions within al-Wadiah. Some abandoned PRSY equipment was seized.

The Saudis claimed to have occupied al-Wadiah by 5 December, and took journalists to the town. Saudi forces claimed to have killed 35 soldiers from the PRSY, and also claimed that they could have marched on Aden, the PRSY capital, had they not been ordered to stop at the border by King Faisal.[8]

Aftermath

Following the conflict the Saudi government began a large scale program of construction of military sites in the region, whilst also deploying further military forces to Sharurah, close to al-Wadiah.[5] Tensions continued, especially after the 1972 Tripoli Agreement, under which North and South Yemen agreed to unite, due to Saudi hostility to any merger. In March 1973 Saudi Arabia claimed that two PRSY MiGs had attacked al-Wadiah, although the PRSY denied any such incident, and claimed Saudi Arabia was searching for a pretext for military intervention in South Yemen.[8] There was a brief warming of relations between the two countries in November 1977, although this soon lapsed and ambassadors were recalled by both countries.[8] There were further reports of clashes in January 1978, including the shooting down of 4 RSAF Lightnings by a PRSY MiG, although this was denied. There were minor clashes in February 1987.[8]

The issue of ownership was finally settled by the Treaty of Jeddah of 2000, which affirmed Saudi ownership of the town.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Dictionary of Modern Arab History: An a to Z of over 2,000 Entries from 1798 to the Present Day . 978-0-7103-0505-3 . Bidwell . Robin Leonard . 1998 . Routledge .
  2. Book: Revolution and Foreign Policy: The Case of South Yemen, 1967-1987 . 978-0-521-89164-6 . Halliday . Fred . 4 April 2002 . Cambridge University Press .
  3. Book: Warfare Since the Second World War . 978-1-351-28970-2 . Schwinghammer . Torsten . 24 April 2018 . Routledge .
  4. Book: King Faisal: Personality, Faith and Times - Alexei Vassiliev - Google Książki . 9780863567612 . Vassiliev . Alexei . March 2013 .
  5. Book: Halliday, Fred. Revolution and Foreign Policy: The Case of South Yemen, 1967-1987 . Cambridge University Press . 9780521891646 . 160 . 2002.
  6. Information Division of the Foreign Ministry of Southern Yemen, "Facts on Saudi Arabian Aggression Against Southern Yemen", statement of 22 December 1969.
  7. Book: Gantzel . Klaus Jürgen . Schwinghammer . Torsten . Warfare Since the Second World War . registration . Transaction Publishers . 9781412841184 . 2000 . 259 .
  8. Book: Bidwell, Robin . Dictionary Of Modern Arab History . Routledge . 9780710305053 . 437 . 1998.
  9. Book: Burrowes, Robert D. . Historical Dictionary of Yemen . Rowman & Littlefield . 9780810855281 . 2010 . 421.
  10. Book: PAF over the Years. Wars in the Mach-2 Era (1961-1970). 66. Group Captain (R) Husseini & Pakistan Air Force. Directorate of Media Affairs, Pakistan Air Force.
  11. Web site: Saudi-Pak relations are unique . https://web.archive.org/web/20220703104555/https://nation.com.pk/2020/08/12/saudi-pak-relations-are-unique/ . 3 July 2022 . The Nation.
  12. Web site: What Accounts for Pakistan's Troop Deployment to Saudi Arabia? . https://web.archive.org/web/20231023083722/https://yemenwatch.net/essay.php?id=12525&cid=123 . 23 October 2023 . YemenWatch . Pakistani combat pilots also flew RSAF English Electric Lightning supersonic fighter aircraft during the al-Wadiah War between Saudi Arabia and the People's Republic of South Yemen in 1969..