1967 North Yemen coup d'état

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Date5 November 1967
Location
Sana'a, North Yemen
Result Coup successful
1967 North Yemen coup d'état

Map of North Yemen
Date5 November 1967
Location
Sana'a, North Yemen
Result Coup successful
Belligerents
Yemen Arab Republic Government of Yemen Arab Republic Yemen Arab Republic Dissenting faction of the armed forces
Yemen Arab Republic Tribal forces
Commanders and leaders
Yemen Arab Republic Abdullah al-Sallal Yemen Arab Republic Abdul Rahman al-Eryani

The 1967 North Yemen coup d'état was a bloodless overthrow of President Abdullah al-Sallal on November 5, 1967, in the Yemen Arab Republic. Yemeni dissidents and tribal forces carried out the coup, acting with the quiet approval of Sallal's main backer Nasserist Egypt.

This was due to a major shift in Egyptian foreign policy. Following the heavy defeat in the Six-Day War, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser lost much of his desire for costly foreign military adventures, including the war in North Yemen. Nasser announced plans to pull back from such commitments. In August 1967, Egypt and Saudi Arabia signed a peace agreement in Khartoum, requiring Egypt to completely withdraw its forces from Yemen. Egypt began pulling its troops out even before the agreement was fully implemented, completing the withdrawal by the end of the year. Reportedly, Nasser himself advised Sallal to step down and leave the country. When Sallal refused and instead flew to Baghdad seeking alternative support for his government, Nasser sent instructions to the remaining Egyptian troops in Yemen: they were not to intervene if the North Yemeni army moved against Sallal.

Seeing their chance, dissident groups and tribal militias moved tanks into the capital, Sana'a. They met no resistance and quickly took control of the Presidential Palace. A radio broadcast soon announced the coup's success, and Sallal asked for political asylum in Iraq.

Power shifted immediately to a three-person civilian leadership group called the Republican Council. Abdul Rahman al-Iryani became its chairman, joined by Ahmed Noman and Mohammad Ali Othman. Speaking for the new council, al-Iryani signaled a readiness to negotiate with the Royalist forces. As a show of goodwill, he pardoned over 3,000 political prisoners and called a conference of major Republican tribes to work towards ending the civil war, promising broader peace talks involving both sides.

However, Sallal's removal and Egypt's withdrawal encouraged royalist forces. They launched a major offensive and laid siege to Sana'a. Facing collapse, the new government secured decisive support from the Soviet Union. Bolstered by this aid, republican forces broke the siege by February 1968. This defeat shattered royalist hopes of a military victory.

Though sporadic fighting continued on for another two years, the lifting of the siege effectively marked the end of the civil war. By 1970, both sides signed a peace agreement agreeing to form a unified government with republican and royalist representation. The eight-year civil war was finally over.

The North Yemen Civil War began in 1962 when Egyptian-trained officers staged a military coup. They overthrew the Mutawakkilite Kingdom and declared the Yemen Arab Republic, installing Colonel Abdullah al-Sallal as president. The new republican government, heavily supported both militarily and politically by Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, fought against Royalist forces loyal to the deposed Imam Muhammad al-Badr, backed by Saudi Arabia, who would not stand for the removal of a monarchy on its southern border by Nasserist forces.[1]

Egypt poured significant amounts of money, weapons, and eventually ground troops into North Yemen to support the Republican side. By 1965, roughly 60,000 Egyptian soldiers were involved in the fighting. This lengthy and expensive commitment which costed Egypt an estimated one million dollars per day became known as "Egypt's Vietnam." Many observers believed this drain on resources weakened Egypt and contributed to the Arab defeat in the 1967 Six-Day War.[1]

Egypt's decisive loss in the Six-Day War marked a major turning point. Facing a serious military setback close to home, Nasser's government reassessed its priorities and largely lost its appetite for costly foreign ventures like the Yemen conflict. Nasser was also frustrated of propping up the unpopular Sallal, whose refusal to make peace with the Yemeni Royalists had cost him the support of even his own followers.[2] Recognizing the need to pull back and cut its losses, Nasser announced Egypt's intention to withdraw its troops from North Yemen.[3]

This eventually led to a peace agreement between Egypt and Saudi Arabia, reached during the Arab Summit in Khartoum in August 1967. The key terms were the complete withdrawal of all Egyptian military forces from North Yemen, an end to Saudi support for the Yemeni Royalists, and an agreement that Yemen's political future would be decided solely by the Yemeni people.[3]

Demonstrating Egypt's eagerness to disengage, Nasser began pulling troops out even before the agreement was fully in effect. All Egyptian forces had left North Yemen by the end of 1967.[3]

Coup

Aftermath

References

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