Yemen, South, People's Republic of
Years: 1967 - 1970
Capital
Aden `Adan YemenRelated Events
Filter results
Showing 3 events out of 3 total
The Near East (1828–1971 CE): Canals, Mandates, Revolutions, and Wars of State-Building
Geography & Environmental Context
The Near East comprises Israel, Egypt, Sudan, western Saudi Arabia (the Hejaz), most of Jordan, southwestern Cyprus, southwestern Turkey, and Yemen. Anchors include the Nile Valley and Delta; Sinai; the Suez Isthmus and canal corridor; the Levantine coast from Gaza to Haifa; the Jordan Valley/Dead Sea basin; the Hejaz mountains and holy cities; Adana–Antalya and the Taurus foothills; southwestern Cyprus; and the Yemeni highlands and Tihāmah coast. River corridors, oases, and pilgrimage routes tied deserts, littorals, and mountain terraces into one strategic web.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
Late Little Ice Age variability gave way to warmer 20th-century trends, but water remained fate: Nile flood failures (e.g., 1877–78) and later regulation under the Aswan Low Dam (1902, raisings) and High Dam (1960–70) re-timed flows, sediments, and fisheries. Dust storms and drought pulses hit Jordan and the Negev; the Hejaz depended on erratic wadis and wells. In Sudan, Sahelian rainfall swings stressed grazing and Gezira canal allocations. Yemen’s terrace agriculture rose and fell with monsoon irregularity; cyclones occasionally lashed the Red Sea and Arabian coasts.
Subsistence & Settlement
-
Egypt & Sudan: From the cotton boom (Crimean War, U.S. Civil War) to state irrigation and the Gezira Scheme (from 1925), export agriculture reoriented peasant fellahin labor. Cairo, Alexandria, and canal towns (Port Said, Ismailia, Suez) surged; Khartoum–Omdurman and riverine Sudanese towns became administrative and trade hubs, then capitals at independence (Sudan, 1956).
-
Levant & Jordan: Mixed cereals, olives, and citrus persisted; irrigated citrus at Jaffa and valley schemes in Jordan expanded. After 1948, refugee camps, new towns, and state farming projects reshaped settlement on both sides of the Jordan.
-
Israel (from 1948): Rapid urbanization (Tel Aviv, Haifa), coastal citrus and cotton, irrigated Negev schemes, and collective kibbutzim and moshavim reconfigured land use.
-
Hejaz (western Saudi Arabia): Mecca–Medina economies centered on hajj provisioning, construction, and services; Jidda grew as the gateway port.
-
Yemen: Highland terraces (sorghum, coffee, qat) supported dense villages; Aden (British, 1839–1967) was a coaling and bunkering hub, later a refinery port.
-
SW Turkey & SW Cyprus: Citrus, tobacco, cotton, and coastal trade tied Antalya–Adana basins and Cypriot ports into Mediterranean circuits; SW Cyprus shifted from mixed farming to remittance- and tourism-adjacent services by mid-century.
Technology & Material Culture
Irrigation barrages, canals, and later high dams transformed the Nile and Gezira. The Suez Canal (opened 1869) revolutionized global shipping, spawning company towns and a cosmopolitan dockside material culture. Railways (Cairo–Aswan; Haifa lines; Hejaz Railway to Medina, partial after 1908), and later highways and pipelines, re-mapped mobility. Urban crafts modernized into mills, ginneries, refineries, cement works, and shipyards (Alexandria, Suez, Aden, Haifa). Print, records, cinema, radio, and then television spread from Cairo and Jaffa to remote valleys; domestic life pivoted from mud-brick and courtyard houses toward apartment blocks and concrete terraces.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
-
Canal & Red Sea trunk: The Suez Canal fused Mediterranean and Indian Ocean worlds; bazaars, souks, and shipping firms connected Port Said to Bombay and Marseille.
-
Pilgrimage highways: Annual hajj flows—by steamer and road—underwrote Hejazi economies; 20th-century health, water, and transport investments scaled the pilgrimage.
-
Mandates & air routes: British and French mandate systems (to the north and east) touched this subregion via ports and pipelines; air corridors (Cairo, Lydda/Lod, Jidda, Aden) knitted it to empire and, later, post-imperial networks.
-
Refuge and labor: After 1948, Palestinian displacement reshaped Gaza, Jordan, and Israel; Sudanese and Egyptian workers circulated along river and canal fronts; Yemeni and Hejazi workers moved between Aden, Jidda, and the Gulf.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Cairo’s presses, al-Azhar reforms, and the Nahda (Arab renaissance) seeded newspapers, novels, and constitutional ideas; Umm Kulthūm, ʿAbd al-Wahhāb, and film studios made Egypt the Arabic world’s cultural capital. Zionist revival in Hebrew letters, schools, and settlement institutions culminated in Israeli state culture after 1948. Coptic institutions in Egypt, Jewish and Christian communities in Palestine/Israel, Greek communities in Cyprus, and Zaydi religious life in Yemen signaled deep pluralism. The hajj remained the ritual axis of the Hejaz. Street murals, political posters, and radio speeches (from Nasser to King ʿAbdullāh, from Imam Yahyā to President al-Sallāl, the first head of the Yemen Arab Republic) turned modern media into public ritual.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
-
Water mastery: Barrages, canals, and later the High Dam stabilized irrigation but altered silt, fisheries, and disease ecologies; drainage and sāqiya replacement reduced water-borne burdens even as schistosomiasis lingered.
-
Terrace care: In Palestine, Jordan, and Yemen, stone terraces and cisterns conserved soil and water; spring captures and wadis were regulated for villages and kibbutzim.
-
Pastoral pivots: In Sudan and the Hejaz, herders shifted routes with drought; market sedentarization advanced along roads and rail.
-
Urban services: Public health campaigns (malaria control, vaccination), modern hospitals, and grain boards buffered shocks; rationing and port provisioning sustained cities during wars and closures.
Political & Military Shocks
-
Egypt & Sudan: ʿUrābī Revolt (1881–82) and British occupation (1882); Anglo-Egyptian Condominium in Sudan (1899); Egyptian Revolution (1952); Suez Crisis (1956) after canal nationalization; Sudanese independence (1956) and post-colonial realignments.
-
Hejaz & western Arabia: Hashemite control ended with Saudi conquest (1925); pilgrimage administration and urban growth accelerated under the new state.
-
Israel–Arab wars: 1948–49 war and armistices; 1956 Suez War; 1967 Six-Day War (Sinai, Gaza, West Bank, Golan outside our strict list but West Bank affects Jordan); War of Attrition (1969–70) along the Suez.
-
Jordan: Emirate (1921), independence (1946), refugee integration after 1948, and Black September (1970) tensions.
-
Cyprus (SW): British administration (from 1878), enosis debates, and independence (1960) set the stage for later crises.
-
Yemen: Imamate rule in the north; Aden under Britain; North Yemen Civil War (1962–70) pitted republicans and royalists with Egyptian and Saudi intervention; South Yemen independence (1967) transformed Aden.
-
Turkey (SW): From Ottoman to Republic (1923); land and port development in Adana–Antalya, integration with national reforms.
Transition
Between 1828 and 1971, the Near East shifted from an Ottoman-provincial world of canals, caravans, and terraces into a mosaic of post-imperial states and mass politics. The Suez Canal remade global trade; British occupation, mandate-era corridors, and Zionist settlement recast demographics and power; 1948, 1956, and 1967 etched borders through cities and fields. Nasserist high modernism—dams, factories, land reform—collided with cold-war alignments and regional wars. In the Hejaz, the hajj scaled into a modern infrastructural pilgrimage; in Yemen, revolutions and decolonization closed the imperial coaling age of Aden. By 1971, the subregion’s everyday life—from Nile canals and Jordan terraces to Hejazi hostels and Yemeni hill towns—was reordered by states, mass media, and wars, setting the stage for oil-era geopolitics and yet-deeper contests over water, land, and sovereignty.
The Middle East (1960–1971): Regional Transformations and the Rise of Oil Politics
The era from 1960 to 1971 is pivotal for the Middle East, characterized by intense geopolitical struggles, rapid economic transformations driven by oil wealth, shifting regional alliances, and critical developments in Arab nationalism, culminating in profound long-term consequences for the region and beyond.
The Formation of OPEC and the Era of Oil Politics
In 1960, five oil-exporting nations—Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela—form the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). This event marks a crucial turning point, as Middle Eastern nations begin asserting control over their natural resources and challenging Western dominance of oil markets. Initially, OPEC’s influence is modest, but the foundation laid during this era sets the stage for future global economic power shifts.
Oil wealth rapidly transforms the Arabian Peninsula. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates undergo significant modernization, investing in infrastructure, education, and healthcare. These states emerge as crucial economic hubs with growing international leverage.
Egypt under Nasser and Arab Nationalism
Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser remains the region's leading figure in the early 1960s, advocating pan-Arab nationalism, socialism, and anti-imperialism. His influence peaks with the establishment of the United Arab Republic (UAR), initially a union of Egypt and Syria (1958–1961). However, the union collapses in 1961 due to Syrian dissatisfaction with Egyptian dominance.
Nasser's regional prestige endures despite setbacks. He supports revolutionary movements throughout the Arab world, notably in Yemen, where Egyptian troops intervene in a prolonged and costly civil war (1962–1967). This drains Egypt's resources and contributes to future vulnerabilities.
The Arab-Israeli Conflict and the Six-Day War (1967)
Tensions between Israel and its Arab neighbors escalate dramatically throughout the 1960s. A critical flashpoint occurs in June 1967 with the Six-Day War, when Israel launches preemptive strikes against Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, following months of escalating rhetoric and troop mobilizations.
The outcome is a resounding Israeli victory, dramatically altering the region’s geopolitical map. Israel captures the Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip from Egypt, the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan, and the strategic Golan Heights from Syria. This devastating defeat deeply wounds Arab nationalism, humiliating Nasser and shaking Arab confidence.
In the war's aftermath, hundreds of thousands of additional Palestinian refugees are displaced. The occupied territories become focal points of bitter disputes, setting the stage for future conflicts and prolonged occupation.
Palestinian Nationalism and the Rise of the PLO
Following the 1967 war, Palestinian identity and resistance to Israeli occupation intensify. The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), founded in 1964 as a political body representing Palestinians, rapidly evolves into a prominent militant organization under Yasser Arafat’s leadership by 1969. Palestinian guerrilla operations against Israel increase significantly, particularly from bases in Jordan and Lebanon, drawing these countries deeper into regional conflict.
In Jordan, tensions between Palestinian guerrillas and King Hussein’s government culminate in the Black September crisis of 1970. Jordanian forces violently suppress Palestinian factions, resulting in thousands of deaths and driving the PLO leadership to relocate to Lebanon, further destabilizing that nation.
Syria and Iraq: Radical Regimes and Ba’athist Rule
In Syria, instability following the collapse of the UAR leads to several coups, culminating in the seizure of power by the Arab Socialist Ba’ath Party in 1963. By 1970, Defense Minister Hafez al-Assad consolidates his power through a military coup, establishing an authoritarian regime marked by socialist economic policies, repression of dissent, and strategic alignment with the Soviet Union.
In Iraq, instability persists throughout the 1960s. A Ba’athist-led coup in 1968 brings Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr and his deputy, Saddam Hussein, to power. The new Iraqi government pursues extensive modernization and social reform but also establishes a fiercely authoritarian system, marked by brutal suppression of opposition and increased militarization.
Iran and the Shah’s Modernization
In Iran, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi launches ambitious economic and social reforms, known as the White Revolution (1963), aimed at rapid modernization, land redistribution, and industrialization. While the reforms stimulate economic growth and infrastructure development, they alienate religious leaders and large segments of Iranian society who view them as overly secular, authoritarian, and westernizing. Opposition to the Shah grows, planting seeds for future unrest.
Lebanon: Fragile Balance and Rising Tensions
Lebanon, traditionally viewed as a stable commercial center, becomes increasingly volatile as Palestinian refugees and PLO factions settle within its borders. By the late 1960s, Lebanese politics grow dangerously polarized, as Christians and Muslims diverge sharply over the Palestinian presence. Although full-scale conflict does not erupt until later, the foundations of Lebanon's subsequent civil strife are firmly laid during this period.
Turkey and Cyprus: Regional Conflict
Turkey, a strategic NATO member, experiences economic growth and stability under military-backed governments in the 1960s, but tensions with neighboring Greece escalate dramatically over Cyprus. Inter-communal violence on the island intensifies between Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots, leading to increased regional instability and setting the stage for future Turkish intervention in Cyprus (1974).
Gulf States and British Withdrawal
Britain, weakened economically and politically by World War II and subsequent global commitments, announces its intention to withdraw military and political oversight from the Persian Gulf by 1971. This sparks anxiety among small Gulf sheikhdoms previously protected by British treaties. In response, the states of Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm al-Quwain, and Fujairah establish the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in December 1971. Qatar and Bahrain opt for independence, becoming fully sovereign states in 1971. These new nations rapidly use burgeoning oil revenues to modernize and diversify their economies.
Oman’s Internal Conflict and Modernization
Oman experiences severe internal tensions during this period. Sultan Said bin Taimur’s repressive rule and resistance to modernization lead to significant unrest, notably the prolonged Dhofar Rebellion (1965–1975). In 1970, Sultan Said is overthrown by his British-backed son, Qaboos bin Said, who immediately embarks on a modernization program, ending Oman’s isolation and seeking regional cooperation and stability.
Legacy of the Era (1960–1971)
The period from 1960 to 1971 profoundly reshapes the Middle East. The Six-Day War significantly alters regional geopolitics, embedding long-lasting Arab-Israeli conflicts and the Palestinian issue deeply within regional and global politics. OPEC’s formation and increased oil wealth dramatically enhance the global influence of Middle Eastern states. Meanwhile, the emergence of authoritarian regimes in Syria and Iraq, the Shah’s modernization in Iran, and internal turmoil in Lebanon and Oman highlight the region's complexity and instability. These developments set the stage for intensified future conflicts, regional power shifts, and enduring strategic rivalries, profoundly influencing Middle Eastern politics into the twenty-first century.
Gamal Abdel Nasser takes the initiative to prevent a rightist reversal in Syria and reassert his leadership of the Arab cause.
The Egyptian president has been the fulcrum of Arab politics throughout the 1950s and early 1960s.
Nasser's success, however, is short-lived; his union with Syria had fallen apart in less than four years, the revolutionary government in Iraq has proven to be a competitor for power, and the presence of fifty thousand Egyptian troops in Yemen has failed to overcome the forces supporting the Yemeni imam, who is backed in turn by Saudi Arabia.
Moreover, his refusal to recognize Israel and Egypt's defeat by Israel in 1956 has forced him to divert vast sums into military channels that might have gone to implement his social revolution.
By the spring of 1967, Nasser's waning prestige, escalating Syrian-Israeli tensions, and the emergence of Eshkol as prime minister have set the stage for a third Arab-Israeli war.
