It includes forming a government in partnership with the Houthis.. A British newspaper reveals a new road map
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A British newspaper revealed a modified road map for peace in Yemen, which includes the formation of a national unity government in Yemen in partnership between the Yemeni legitimacy and the Houthi militias.
The British newspaper The Guardian reported today, Tuesday, May 14, that the United States asked Saudi Arabia to revive the peace agreement with the Houthis, which have been attacking commercial ships in the Red Sea since November.
The newspaper said in a report that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with the support of the United Nations Special Envoy to Yemen, Hans Grundberg, wants to move forward with the road map, even though it may lead to the delivery of large sums of money to the Houthis, who will also be given Ultimately a permanent place in the proposed national unity government. According to the report.
She added that the UN envoy, Hans Grundberg, informed the Yemeni government and the opposition components of the Houthi militias in Aden, yesterday, Monday, that the peace talks must move forward.
He added that he told the Houthis that he did not envision the roadmap being signed if the Red Sea attacks continued. Grundberg later told the UN Security Council that “despite the conflict, a peaceful and just solution remains possible.”
Leaders of the Aden-based government sounded the alarm on Tuesday, saying any road map would have to be "recalibrated" to be acceptable to them. According to the newspaper. In reference to the legitimacy’s emphasis on the necessity of any road map adhering to the three terms of reference agreed upon nationally, regionally and internationally.
The British newspaper adds that the road map drawn up by the United Nations largely reflects previous discussions between the Saudis and the Houthis, including paying large sums to the Houthis to compensate for unpaid public salaries, and an increase in resources provided to Houthi-controlled areas.
It appears that the Houthis now want to sign the agreement, either with the United Nations or bilaterally with the Saudis, while the Saudis, sensing a military stalemate between the US Navy and the Houthis, appear to be impatient to end their involvement in Yemen, even if it makes the government Legitimacy makes concessions to end the war, according to the newspaper.
She added: It appears that the United States is more responsive to the Saudis’ impatience regarding reaching an agreement on Yemen, and Washington needs Saudi support to end the conflict in Gaza, which opens the diplomatic space for the United States to persuade the Saudis to agree to a defense agreement with the United States and reach an agreement. And normalizing relations with Israel, which in turn may weaken Iran’s influence in the region.
She indicated that Washington has put forward incentives to persuade the Houthis to stop the attacks, including accelerating the roadmap talks and lifting restrictions on Houthi trade, noting that British officials prefer to take a tougher approach with the Houthis on the basis that signing a peace agreement that is beneficial to the Houthis is a matter Unjustified.
In early December, the broad outlines of a UN roadmap for peace in Yemen were agreed, but progress was immediately frozen as the Houthis escalated their campaign of attacks in the Red Sea in what they described as an act of solidarity with Palestine.
The US and UK are trying to destroy Houthi mobile missile sites, but last week the Houthis said they were planning to expand the scope of attacks, and ship traffic volumes in the Red Sea remain relatively low at 40-50% of those in the same period last year. .