Author: Hamidi Ayman
Publisher: Routledge Ltd
ISSN: 0026-3206
Source: Middle Eastern Studies, Vol.45, Iss.2, 2009-03, pp. : 165-187
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Abstract
The article investigates the so-called 'Huthi crisis' in northern Yemen, centering on the recent confrontation between Zaydi Shi'is and the government. The crisis is analysed in the context of local contestations over moral authority and regional developments since the late 1970s. The article shows how regional and global dynamics, notably Cold War strategic alliances, Saudi Arabia's aspirations to contain Shi'ism on the Arabian Peninsula and American security concerns since 2001, have impacted local politics and configurations of power. The article argues that anxieties over the past remain, against the backdrop of the politicisation and repression of the Zaydi revivalist movement, depicted by the government as aiming to restore the imamate. The government was open to accusations of ambivalence towards Sunni militants, by using them alongside the army and giving them positions of power while at the same time claiming to counter their influence. Action against the Zaydis established its credentials in the 'war on terror.'
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