Irlu expelled: Real reasons for Tehran’s man departing from Yemen
The Houthi militia in Yemen has
abandoned Iranian Envoy Hassan Irlu. There were no public differences between
Irlu and Houthi leader Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, but suddenly he was sent abroad
in a process that bore negative connotations about the relationship between
Tehran and the militia.
The presence of Irlu, a leader in
the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, was
not ordinary. Rather, it was the heading of a new phase that Tehran’s influence
reached in Yemen, in which its project moved from exercising roles secretly or
indirectly to a public presence under the shining cover of the ambassador’s
position.
Although no one recognized this
alleged diplomatic relationship between Tehran and the militia, Irlu’s actions
in Sanaa were blatantly destroying these allegations, as he was acting in a way
that suggested great influence by making public decisions without checking with
Houthi members, to whom he was supposed to be a representative of a foreign
country.
Irlu was making statements detailing
sensitive issues in contradiction to the allegations that he represented a
diplomatic mission. He responded to foreign initiatives regarding the Houthis,
and he also signed the initiative submitted by Saudi Arabia to establish peace
in Yemen last summer.
With Tehran and the Houthis
officially announcing Irlu’s departure through the mediation of the Iraqi
government, claiming that he was infected with the corona virus, many questions
arise regarding the truth of what was announced. Among the scenarios mentioned
by media reports is the possibility that Irlu was hit by an airstrike of the
Arab coalition to support legitimacy in Yemen during operations that hit
targets linked to IRGC experts and the Lebanese Hezbollah in Sanaa.
Arab and international news reports
also talked about the existence of deep differences between Irlu and Houthi
leaders over control of decision-making, after he marginalized the group’s
leaders and blatantly dominated their decisions, which hindered their
cooperation with him and made them prefer to work without him, especially after
splits occurred in the ranks of the militia, accompanied by objections to the
progress of work within it.
Irlu’s departure remains an
opportunity for Iran to reduce the cost of its public presence, but it does not
mean in any way a change in its policy towards Yemen, as the Houthis have been
an Iranian arm for many years.