The arrival in Yemen of 450 Latin American troops — among them
are also Panamanian, Salvadoran and Chilean soldiers — adds to the chaotic stew
of government armies, armed tribes, terrorist networks and Yemeni militias
currently at war in the country. Earlier this year, a coalition of countries
led by Saudi Arabia, including the United States, began a military campaign in
Yemen against Houthi rebels who have pushed the Yemeni government out of the
capital, Sana.
Mercenaries are an attractive option for rich
countries who wish to wage war yet whose citizens may not want to fight,” said
Sean McFate, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and author of “The Modern
Mercenary.”
“The private military industry is global now,”
said Mr. McFate, adding that the United States essentially “legitimized” the
industry with its heavy reliance on contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan over
more than a decade of war. “Latin American mercenaries are a sign of what’s to
come,” he said.
The Colombian troops now in Yemen, handpicked
from a brigade of some 1,800 Latin American soldiers training at an Emirati
military base, were woken up in the middle of the night for their deployment to
Yemen last month. They were ushered out of their barracks as their bunkmates
continued sleeping, and were later issued dog tags and ranks in the Emirati
military. Those left behind are now being trained to use grenade launchers and
armored vehicles that Emirati troops are currently using in Yemen.
Emirati officials have made a point of
recruiting Colombian troops over other Latin American soldiers because they
consider the Colombians more battle tested in guerrilla warfare, having spent
decades battling gunmen of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia, or FARC,
in the jungles ofColombia.
The exact mission of the Colombians in Yemen is
unclear, and one person involved in the project said it could be weeks before
they saw regular combat. They join hundreds of Sudanese soldiers whom Saudi
Arabia has recruited to fight there as part of the coalition.
In addition, a recent United Nations report
cited claims that some 400 Eritrean troops might be embedded with the Emirati
soldiers in Yemen — something that, if true, could violate a United Nations
resolution restricting Eritrean military activities.
The United States has also been participating
in the Saudi-led campaign in Yemen, providing logistical support, including
airborne refueling, to the nations conducting the airstrikes. The Pentagon has
sent a team to Saudi Arabia to provide targeting intelligence to the coalition
militaries that is regularly used for the airstrikes.
The Obama administration has also in recent
years approved the sale of billions of dollars’ worth of military hardware from
American contractors to the Saudi and Emirati militaries, equipment that is
being used in the Yemen conflict. This month, the administration authorized a
$1.29 billion Saudi request for thousands of bombs to replenish stocks that had
been depleted by the campaign in Yemen, although American officials say that
the bombs would take months to arrive and were not directly tied to the war in
Yemen.
The Saudi air campaign has received widespread
criticism from human rights groups as being poorly planned and as having
launched strikes that indiscriminately kill Yemeni civilians and aid workers in
the country. Last month, Saudi jets struck a hospital run by Doctors Without
Borders in Saada Province in northern Yemen, and in late September the United
Nations reported that 2,355 civilians had been killed since the campaign began
in March.
On the other side in Yemen is Iran, which over
the years has provided financial and military support to the Houthis, the
Shiite rebel group fighting the coalition of Saudi-led Sunni nations. The
divisions have created the veneer of a sectarian conflict, although Emirati
troops in southern Yemen have also been battling members of Al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula, the Sunni terrorist group’s affiliate in Yemen.
Dozens of Emirati special operations troops
have died since they arrived in southern Yemen in August. A single rocket
attack in early September killed 45, along with several Saudi and Bahrani
soldiers.
The presence of the Latin American troops is an
official secret in the Emirates, and the government has made no public mention
of their deployment to Yemen. Yousef Otaiba, the Emirati ambassador to Washington,
declined to comment. A spokesman for United States Central Command, the
military headquarters overseeing America’s involvement in the Yemen conflict,
also declined to comment.
The Latin American force in the Emirates was
originally conceived to carry out mostly domestic missions — guarding pipelines
and other sensitive infrastructure and possibly putting down riots in the
sprawling camps housing foreign workers in the Emirates — according to
corporate documents, American officials and several people involved in the
project.
A 2011 intelligence briefing for senior leaders
involved in the project listed Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, Somali
pirates and domestic riots as some of the biggest threats to Emirati stability.
The troops were told that they might one day be
called for foreign combat missions, but until the deployment to Yemen the only
external missions they were given were to provide security on commercial cargo
vessels.
Those missions were rare, and soldiers involved
in the project describe years of monotony at the desert camp, housed within a
sprawling Emirati military base called Zayed Military City. They rise every day
at 5 a.m. for exercise and military training — including shooting practice,
navigation and riot control. A number of Westerners, including several
Americans, live at the camp and serve as trainers for the Latin American
troops.
But by late morning the sun burns so hot at the
windswept complex that the troops move into air-conditioned classrooms for
military instruction.
The troops live in typically austere military
barracks, hanging their laundry out the windows to dry in the hot air. There is
a common computer room where they can check their email and Facebook pages, but
they are not allowed to post photographs on social media sites. Meals are
basic.
“It’s the same food all the time, every day,”
one member of the project said several weeks ago. “Chicken every single
day.”
The Emiratis have spent the equivalent of
millions of dollars equipping the unit, from firearms and armored vehicles to
communications systems and night vision technology. But Emirati leaders rarely
visit the camp. When they do, the troops put on tactical demonstrations,
including rappelling from helicopters and driving armored dune buggies.
And yet they stay largely because of the money,
receiving salaries ranging from $2,000 to $3,000 a month, compared with
approximately $400 a month they would make in Colombia. Those troops who deploy to Yemen will receive
an additional $1,000 per week, according to a person involved in the project
and a former senior Colombian military officer.
Hundreds of Colombian troops have been trained
in the Emirates since the project began in 2010 — so many that the Colombian
government once tried to broker an agreement with Emirati officials to stanch
the flow headed to the Persian Gulf. Representatives from the two governments
met, but an agreement was never signed.
Most of the recruiting of former troops in
Colombia is done by Global Enterprises, a Colombian company run by a former
special operations commander named Oscar Garcia Batte. Mr. Batte is also
co-commander of the brigade of Colombian troops in the Emirates, and is part of
the force now deployed in Yemen.
Mr. McFate said that the steady migration of
Latin American troops to the Persian Gulf had created a “gun drain” at a time
when Latin American countries need soldiers in the battle against drug cartels.
But experts in Colombia said that the promise
of making more money fighting for the Emirates — money that the troops send
much of home to their families in Colombia — makes it hard to keep soldiers at
home.
“These great offers, with good salaries and
insurance, got the attention of our best soldiers,” said Jaime Ruiz, the
president of Colombia’s Association of Retired Armed Forces Officials.
“Many of them retired from the army and left.”
ΠΗΓΉ:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/26/world/middleeast/emirates-secretly-sends-colombian-mercenaries-to-fight-in-yemen.html?_r=0
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