Yemen airstrikes to go on until rebel withdraw: Arab leaders

Saudi King Salman attends the opening meeting of the Arab Summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, in the South Sinai governorate, south of Cair.
Saudi King Salman attends the opening meeting of the Arab Summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, in the South Sinai governorate, south of Cair.
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AP, Egypt :
 Arab leaders say Saudi-led airstrikes in Yemen will continue until Iranian-backed Shiite rebels there “withdraw” and surrender their weapons.
The warning came in a final communique released Sunday, the second day of an Arab summit in the Egyptian resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh.
The summit has been dominated by the crisis in Yemen as airstrikes continue against the positions of the rebels and their allies.
The communique also called for military and intelligence cooperation between Arab countries and international efforts to combat Islamic militant groups.
It also urged the West to adopt a comprehensive approach to militancy, a thinly veiled reference to the desire by Egypt and others to see a military intervention in Libya, home to an affiliate of the Islamic State group as well as other extremists.
The summit will also call on Iranian-allied Houthi fighters, who have made rapid advances in Yemen, to leave that country’s capital and hand over their arms to “legitimate” authorities, said the draft, obtained by Reuters.
Working out the mechanism and logistics of the unified force, an idea floated by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, could take months. Previous similar schemes have failed to produce tangible results in the divided Arab world.
The draft resolution identified the military force as voluntary, meaning no state would be required to take part.
That may give Arab states the flexibility needed for intervention in countries such as Yemen, where Saudi Arabia patched together a 10-nation Arab coalition against Houthi fighters and launched military strikes on Thursday.
The dangers facing the region are stark. While conflicts intensify in Yemen and Libya, the civil war in Syria is entering its fifth year.
Egypt, the most populous Arab state, faces an Islamist militant insurgency.
Islamic State militants have taken over swathes of Iraq and Syria and spawned splinter groups across the Arab world. The United States and other major powers are seeking a final nuclear deal with Iran, in a process that worries many Sunni Arab leaders wary of Shi’ite Iran’s growing regional influence.
The summit calls for “the establishment of an Arab military force in which countries will participate voluntarily.”
“This force will intervene to confront threats to the security and peace of any member state at the request of relevant countries,” said the draft resolution, adding that Iraq expressed reservations.
The Saudi-led operation in Yemen has underlined the rivalry between the predominantly Sunni kingdom and Shi’ite Iran and it could inflame sectarian proxy wars that have spread in the Middle East since the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011.
Chaos in Libya may be one key test for the unified force if it intervenes in a country with factions allied to two governments, vying for control of territory and oil facilities.
Sisi has repeatedly called for concerted Arab and Western action against what he sees as an existential threat posed by militant groups operating in Libya and elsewhere.
He ordered air strikes against Islamic State militants in Libya after the ultra-hardline Sunni group beheaded 21 Egyptian Christians in the chaotic neighbouring country.
Arab leaders will call for the United Nations to lift an international arms embargo on Libya, which says the move is needed to prevent Islamic State from advancing.
But Qatar, accused by the Libyan government of supporting armed groups opposed to internationally-recognised authorities, expressed reservations, according to the draft communique.
Doha denies accusations that it is meddling in Libya.
Analysts say Libya is turning into a conflict zone for competing regional powers and faces the threat of civil war four years after Muammar Gaddafi’s fall.
Egypt has accused Qatar of supporting terrorism, allegations it denies. Ties between the countries have been strained since then army chief Sisi removed the Doha-backed Muslim Brotherhood from power in 2013 after mass protests against its rule.
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