Yemen: Background and U.S. Relations

reportActive / Technical Report | Accession Number: ADA530622 | Open PDF

Abstract:

With limited natural resources, a crippling illiteracy rate, and high population growth, Yemen faces an array of daunting development challenges that some observers believe make it at risk for becoming a failed state. In 2009, Yemen ranked 140 out of 182 countries on the United Nations Development Programs Human Development Index, a score comparable to the poorest sub-Saharan African countries. Over 43 of the population of nearly 24 million people lives below the poverty line, and per capita GDP is estimated to be between 650 and 800. Yemen is largely dependent on external aid from Persian Gulf countries, Western donors, and international financial institutions, though its per capita share of assistance is below the global average. As the countrys population rapidly rises, resources dwindle, terrorist groups take root in the outlying provinces, and a southern secessionist movement grows, the Obama Administration and the 111th Congress are left to grapple with the consequences of Yemeni instability. Traditionally, U.S.-Yemeni relations have been tepid, as the lack of strong military-to-military partnership, trade relations, and cross cultural exchanges has hindered the development of close bilateral ties. During the early years of the Bush Administration, relations improved under the rubric of the war against Al Qaeda, though Yemens lax policy toward wanted terrorists and U.S. concerns about governance and corruption have stalled large-scale U.S. support.

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