Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

Damaged military vehicles, reportedly sent by the UAE to support Southern Transitional Council separatist forces, are seen after an air strike was carried out by the Saudi-led coalition in the port of Mukalla, southern Yemen, on Tuesday.STRINGER/AFP/Getty Images

The United Arab Emirates said on Tuesday it was pulling its remaining forces out of Yemen after Saudi Arabia backed a call for UAE forces to leave within 24 hours, in a major crisis between the two Gulf powers and oil producers.

Hours earlier, Saudi-led coalition forces had attacked the southern Yemeni port of Mukalla. The air strike on what ‍Riyadh said was ​a UAE-linked weapons shipment was the most significant escalation to date in a widening rift between the two Gulf monarchies.

In Washington, the U.S. State Department said Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud about tensions in Yemen and “issues impacting regional security and stability.”

In Washington, the U.S. State Department said Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with the Saudi and UAE foreign ministers about tensions in Yemen and other issues affecting security in the Middle East.

Several Gulf countries, including Kuwait and Bahrain, said they would support any efforts to bolster dialogue and reach a political solution. Qatar said the security of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries “constitutes an inseparable part” of its own security.

Once the twin pillars of regional security, the Gulf heavyweights have seen their interests diverge on everything from oil quotas to geopolitical influence.

Saudi Arabia said on Tuesday its national security was a red line and backed a call for UAE forces to leave Yemen within 24 hours, shortly after a Saudi-led coalition carried out an air strike on the southern Yemeni port of Mukalla.

Reuters

The UAE defence ministry said it had voluntarily ended the mission of its counterterrorism units in Yemen, its only forces still there after it “concluded” its military presence in 2019.

The ministry said its remaining mission was limited to “specialized personnel as part of counterterrorism efforts, in co-ordination with ⁠relevant international partners.”

In a statement, it said recent developments had prompted a comprehensive assessment, the state news agency WAM reported.

Saudi Arabia had accused the UAE of pressuring Yemen’s separatist Southern Transitional Council (STC) to push toward the kingdom’s borders, and declaring its national security a “red line.”

It was Riyadh’s strongest language yet in the falling-out between the neighbours, who once co-operated in a coalition against Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis but have seen their interests there steadily diverge.

The UAE ‌withdrawal of the few forces it had kept ‍in Yemen may ease tensions for now. But the real issue is whether it will keep supporting the STC.

Riyadh for its part has continued, through the coalition it heads, ‍to back Yemen’s internationally recognized government and the cabinet said it hoped the UAE would ‌end all military or financial assistance to the STC.

Open this photo in gallery:

This frame grab from a video broadcast by Saudi state television on Tuesday shows what the kingdom describes as a shipment of weapons and armoured vehicles coming from the UAE, at Mukalla, Yemen.Saudi State Television/The Associated Press

The coalition bombed what it said was a dock used to provide foreign military support to the ⁠separatists. Rashad al-Alimi, head of Yemen’s Saudi-backed presidential council, gave Emirati forces 24 hours to leave.

The UAE said it had been surprised by the air strike, and that the shipments in question did not contain weapons ​and were destined for the Emirati forces. But it said it sought a solution “that prevents escalation, based on reliable facts and existing co-ordination.”

Yemen’s Saudi-led coalition said a shipment arriving from the United ​Arab Emirates to Yemen’s southern port of Mukalla had containers loaded with weapons and ammunition.

The coalition said it had information that such weapons would be transported and distributed to locations in Yemen’s Hadramout.

In a televised speech, Alimi said it had been “definitively confirmed that the United Arab Emirates pressured and directed the STC to undermine and rebel against the authority of the state through military escalation,” according to the Yemeni state news agency.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are both major players in the OPEC oil exporters’ group, and any disagreements between them could hamper consensus on oil output.

They and six other OPEC+ members meet online on Sunday, and OPEC+ delegates say ​they will extend a policy of maintaining first-quarter production unchanged.

Major stock indexes in the Gulf fell.

Saudi Investment Minister eyes opportunities in Canada in fields such as food, mining

Opinion: Canada will need to consider growing its relations with non-democratic Gulf States

The UAE was a member of the Saudi-led coalition battling the Houthi movement from 2015. In 2019 it started to draw down its troops but remained committed to the Saudi-backed government.

The STC later decided to seek self-rule in the south, and this month launched an offensive against Saudi-supported Yemeni troops.

The advance broke years of stalemate, with the STC defying Saudi warnings to claim broad control of the south, including Hadramout province.

Tuesday’s air strike followed the weekend arrival of two ships from the UAE port of Fujairah on Saturday and Sunday without coalition authorization, the coalition said.

The Saudi state news agency published a video showing a ship it identified as “Greenland,” ⁠from which it said arms and combat vehicles were unloaded. The registered owner and operator of the Greenland, a roll-on/roll-off cargo vessel, is Salem Al Makrani Cargo Company, headquartered in ⁠Dubai, with a branch in Fujairah, the company website indicates.

The coalition said the strike caused no casualties or collateral damage, according to Saudi state media. Two sources told Reuters that it targeted ‌the dock where the cargoes were unloaded.

Reuters could not immediately verify what had been hit or the nature or origin of any cargoes that may have been attacked.

Yemeni state TV showed what it said was black smoke rising from the port in the early morning, with burned vehicles. Alimi declared a no-fly zone, and a sea and ground blockade on all ports and crossings for 72 hours.

Aidarous al-Zubaidi, head of the STC and deputy head of the presidential council, said in a joint statement with three other members of the council that the UAE remained a main partner in the fight against the Houthis. It rejected Alimi’s orders ‌and said they lacked consensus.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe