By: Ahmed Abdu-Almalik Al-ansi. | Yemeni journalist and translator.
Progress for Yemen’s peace talks is obstructed by US, however Yemeni parties are about to end the war, and the UN special envoy, Hans Grundberg, has asserted that all parties go on with an agreement on humanitarian and economic.
The Interspet journal in America expressed the negative efforts of United States’ to undermine Yemen’s peace discussions, leading the country back into conflict. According to the written report by Ryan Grem, the United States obstructs peace talks in Yemen, and the U.S. is aggressively promoting for restarting the conflict.
Grim reported that over the latest twelve months, there has been a truce in place, and peace talks have been moving forward quickly as a consequence of prisoners swap and other effective diplomatic assessments. However, the U.S. determines to continue the conflict; while American allies have suffered heavy losses on the battlefield, and they are in a weak negotiating position.
According to Grim, Washington wants to destroy peace talks in Yemen because restarting the war would lead to another Saudi-led bombarding operation, which would provide better circumstances for US proxies to dominate Yemen’s highly strategic coastline.
The Interspet journal cited the negative comments of the US envoy Tim Lenderking on discussions: “I don’t think we’re near the finish line yet,” Lenderking added. “I think there will be significant challenges ahead.” I think there is still substantial distrust among the sides, as well as great split within Yemen’s population.”
The Interspet journal asserts, Lenderking is seeking to bring “considerable division” back into the Yemeni population. The Houthis victory in the conflict has helped to bridge much of that division. However, admitting this would give the US, but in reality, The new Yemeni administration doesn’t have any real position in Yemen.
The United States continues to impose additional demands as impediments to Yemen’s peace talks, such as the necessity that discussions be redirected to the United Nations for a complete agreement, according to the Interspet journal. Despite that Hans Grundberg, Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Yemen, informed that “there is a clear indication on all parties to go on with an agreement on humanitarian and economic issues, a long-term truce, and the restart of a Yemeni-led political process”.
This article is exclusively for Mideast Discourse.