Yemen conflict: Saudi Arabia puts forward peace plan

Saudi Arabia has proposed a new peace plan to end nearly six years of war in Yemen.
It suggests a UN-supervised
ceasefire between Yemen's Saudi-backed government and Houthi rebels, who are
supported by Iran.
The plan also includes the
reopening of vital air and sea links, and the start of political negotiations.
Houthi rebels have said the offer
did not appear to go far enough to lift the air and sea blockade in place.
The proposal was announced in the
Saudi capital, Riyadh, by Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan, who
called on the Houthis, who control large swathes of Yemen, to accept it.
He said the ceasefire would come
into force as soon as the Houthis accepted it.
Yemen's internationally recognised
government has welcomed the offer, but the Houthis have said the initiative
provided "nothing new", and fell short of their demand for a complete
lifting of the blockade on the airport in the capital, Sanaa, and the western
port of Hudaydah.
"We expected that Saudi Arabia would announce an
end to the blockade of ports and airports and an initiative to allow in 14
ships that are held by the coalition," Houthi chief negotiator Mohammed
Abdulsalam told Reuters news agency.
The group would continue to talk
with the Saudis, the US and mediator Oman for a peace agreement, he said.
Saudi officials say they are
co-ordinating their steps with the United Nations and the United States, which
have also stepped up their efforts to end a conflict which has created the
world's worst humanitarian crisis.
Only days ago, the Houthis rejected
a US plan for a nationwide ceasefire.
A peace plan is already in the
works; international diplomacy has been quietly accelerating for months. A push
by UN envoy Martin Griffiths was recently bolstered by US President Joe Biden's
new focus on ending this war, and the appointment of US special envoy Tim
Lenderking to help make it happen.
Riyadh's decision to make its own
public statement underscores how it backs this effort to find a way out of this
destructive conflict. And it wants to ensure it's being seen to do so. If these
new moves don't work, the blame would lie with the Houthis. It could also help
confirm the kingdom was in lockstep with its American ally, especially when that
relationship is still strained over the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Riyadh's new concessions,
including the opening of vital air and sea links, will help ease the enormous
suffering of Yemenis. They are also longstanding Houthi demands.
This intensifying diplomacy also
competes with the Houthis' drive for battlefield gains, including the capture
of the strategic town of Marib. Western diplomats express hope that this
now-stalled offensive could provide a window to accelerate efforts on the negotiating
front. But it won't be easy.
Iran, which backs the Houthis, may
also see an opportunity to burnish its own peace-making credentials. Whatever
brings the warring sides to the table will be welcomed by an exhausted people
on the brink of famine in this endless war.
The Saudi offer coincides with
increasing drone and missile attacks by Houthi rebels on Saudi energy and
security infrastructure.
There's also been renewed bombing
by the Saudi-led coalition of Sanaa, which is under Houthi control.
Many previous peace plans for
Yemen have failed, including last year's Saudi ceasefire. But the kingdom is
now offering some concessions the Houthis have long called for, including the
opening of the international airport in Sanaa, currently under Houthi control,
although the Saudi-led coalition controls the airspace.
If the warring sides agree to a
ceasefire, it would be supervised by the UN and help pave the way for peace
talks.
The two sides are still far apart,
but this is the most concerted effort to try to bring them together, the BBC's
chief international correspondent Lyse Doucet says.
The conflict began in late 2014, when rebels seized control of much of the west of the country and a Saudi-led coalition of Arab states launched a military operation to restore President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi's rule.