- Foreign relations of Yemen
North Yemen
The geography and ruling
Imam s of north Yemen kept the country isolated from foreign influence before 1962. The country's relations withSaudi Arabia were defined by theTaif Agreement of 1934 which delineated the northernmost part of the border between the two kingdoms and set the framework for commercial and other intercourse. The Taif Agreement has been renewed periodically in 20-year increments, and its validity was reaffirmed in 1995. Relations with the British colonial authorities inAden and the south were usually tense.The Soviet and Communist Chinese Aid Missions established in 1958 and 1959 were the first important non-
Muslim presence in North Yemen. Following the September 1962 revolution, theYemen Arab Republic became closely allied with and heavily dependent uponEgypt . Saudi Arabia aided the royalists in their attempt to defeat the republicans and did not recognize the Yemen Arab Republic until 1970. Subsequently, Saudi Arabia provided Yemen substantial budgetary and project support. At the same time, Saudi Arabia maintained direct contact with Yemeni tribes, which sometimes strained its official relations with the Yemeni government. Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis found employment in Saudi Arabia during the late 1970s and 1980s.In February 1989, North Yemen joined
Iraq ,Jordan , and Egypt informing theArab Cooperation Council (ACC), an organization created partly in response to the founding of theGulf Cooperation Council , and intended to foster closer economic cooperation and integration among its members. After unification, the Republic of Yemen was accepted as a member of the ACC in place of its YAR predecessor. In the wake of the Persian Gulf crisis, the ACC has remained inactive.outh Yemen
British authorities left southern Yemen in November 1967 in the wake of an intense terrorist campaign. The
People's Democratic Republic of Yemen , the successor to British colonial rule, had diplomatic relations with many nations, but its major links were with the Soviet Union and other Communist countries. Relations between it and the conservative Arab states of theArabian Peninsula were strained. There were military clashes with Saudi Arabia in 1969 and 1973, and the PDRY provided active support for theDhofar Rebellion against theSultan ate ofOman . The PDRY was the only Arab state to vote against admitting new Arab states from thePersian Gulf area to theUnited Nations and theArab League . The PDRY provided sanctuary and material support to various international terrorist groups.Present day Yemen
Yemen is a member of the United Nations, the Arab League, and the organization of the Islamic conference. Yemen participates in the nonaligned movement. The Republic of Yemen accepted responsibility for all treaties and debts of its predecessors, the YAR and the PDRY. Yemen has acceded to theNuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and has stressed the need to render the Middle East region free of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction. ThePersian Gulf crisis dramatically affected Yemen's foreign relations. As a member of theUN Security Council (UNSC) for 1990 and 1991, Yemen abstained on a number of UNSC resolutions concerning Iraq andKuwait and voted against the "use of force resolution". Western and Persian Gulf Arab states reacted by curtailing or canceling aid programs and diplomatic contacts. At least 850,000 Yemenis returned from Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf.Subsequent to the liberation of Kuwait, Yemen continued to maintain high-level contacts with Iraq. This hampered its efforts to rejoin the Arab mainstream and to mend fences with its immediate neighbors. In 1993, Yemen launched an unsuccessful diplomatic offensive to restore relations with its Persian Gulf neighbors. Some of its aggrieved neighbors actively aided the south during the 1994
civil war . Since the end of that conflict, tangible progress has been made on the diplomatic front in restoring normal relations with Yemen's neighbors. The Omani-Yemeni border has been officially demarcated. In the summer of 2000, Yemen and Saudi Arabia signed an International Border Treaty settling a 50-year-old dispute over the location of the border between the two countries. Yemen settled its dispute withEritrea over theHanish Islands in 1998.ee also
*
Diplomatic missions of Yemen
*Iran-Arab Relations (Yemen)
*Yemen-Pakistan relations
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