The Red Sea Crucible: From Nasser’s Mountains to Somaliland’s Shores
How a Half-Century of Proxy Wars, Shifting Ideologies, and Chokepoint Diplomacy Redefined the Middle East The North Yemen Civil War, long dubbed Egypt’s Vietnam, ignited a half-century of regional turbulence that reshaped the Arab world’s geopolitical architecture. What began in 1962 as a republican coup rapidly metastasized into a proxy crucible between Nasser’s pan-Arabism and Saudi-backed monarchism, draining Cairo’s military, fracturing Egyptian society, and inadvertently setting the stage for the 1967 Six-Day War. As the Cold War waned, the ideological battleground gave way to pragmatic realignments, yet Yemen’s rugged topography, tribal autonomy, and strategic chokepoints ensured it remained a magnet for external intervention. The modern Houthi movement, evolving from the marginalized Zaydi Imamate, has resurrected old fault lines, while contemporary conflicts have spilled across the Gulf of Aden into Somaliland. Today’s Red Sea crisis is no longer a clash of secularism versus ...