Three Yemeni army commanders, including a top general, defected yesterday to the opposition, calling for an end to Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s rule, as army tanks and armored vehicles deployed in support of thousands protesting in the capital.
With the defection, it appeared Saleh’s support was eroding from every power base in the nation — his own tribe called on him to step down, he fired his entire Cabinet ahead of what one government official said was a planned mass resignation and his ambassador to the UN and human rights minister quit.
All three officers who defected yesterday belong to Saleh’s Hashid tribe. A Hashid leader said the tribe, eager to keep the president’s job for one of its own, was rallying behind one of the men, Major General Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, as a possible replacement for Saleh.
The leader spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.
Al-Ahmar, the most senior of the three officers, is a longtime confidant of Saleh and commander of the army’s powerful 1st Armored Division. Units of the division deployed yesterday in a major square in Sana’a where protesters have been camping out to call for Saleh to step down.
Saleh’s crackdown on a month-long uprising against his rule has grown increasingly violent in recent days — suggesting he is becoming more fearful that the unprecedented street protests could unravel his three--decade grip on power in the volatile and impoverished nation.
He also tried unsuccessfully to calm the protest by pulling back riot police.
The two other officers are Mohammed Ali Mohsen and Hameed al-Qusaibi, who both have the rank of brigadier. Yemen’s ambassadors to Jordan, Syria and the parliament’s deputy speaker also announced yesterday they were supporting the opposition, further undermining Saleh’s weakening authority.
Tanks and armored personnel carriers belonging to the Republican Guards, an elite force led by Saleh’s son and one-time heir apparent, Ahmed, were deployed outside the presidential palace on the southern outskirts of the capital, witnesses said.
The deployment appeared designed to counter the presence on the streets elsewhere in the city of elements of the 1st Armored Division.
News of the defections came one day after crowds flooded cities and towns across Yemen to mourn dozens of protesters killed on Friday when Saleh’s security forces opened fire from rooftops on a demonstration in Sana’a.
Saleh and his weak government have faced down many serious challenges, often forging fragile alliances with restive tribes to extend power beyond the capital, Sana’a. Most recently, he has battled a seven-year armed rebellion in the north, a secessionist movement in the south and an al-Qaeda offshoot that is of great concern to the US.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which formed in January 2009, has moved beyond regional aims and attacked the West, including sending a suicide bomber who tried to down a US-bound airliner with a bomb sewn into his underwear. The device failed to detonate properly.
Yemen is also home to US-born radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who is believed to have offered inspiration to those attacking the US, including Army Major Nidal Hasan, who is accused of killing 13 people and wounding dozens in a 2009 shootout at Fort Hood, Texas.
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