The Yemen cease-fire, which took effect last week, is the first serious truce between the country's warring parties in six years. The factions in Yemen agreed to a two-month truce proposed by the United Nations. And on Thursday, Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, Yemen’s exiled president, said he would transfer power to an eight-member presidential council, suggesting progress in ending the war. All of this comes on the heels of a new Yemen War Powers Resolution — announced by Reps. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., and Peter DeFazio, D-Ore. — to end U.S. involvement in the war. Hassan El-Tayyab, the Friends Committee on National Legislation’s legislative director for Middle East policy, joins Ryan Grim to discuss the cease-fire, efforts to end the war in Yemen, factors at play, and the likelihood of finally seeing an end to the war and humanitarian crisis in the country.
https://join.theintercept.com/donate/now
See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
For Abortion Rights, Could Kentucky Be the Next Kansas?
Can a Progressive Populist Win in Trump Country?
How Democrats Botched Impeachment
Senate Races That Could Tip The Balance
The Journalist Censored for Defending Rashida Tlaib
Bolsonaro on the Brink as the Far Right Rises in Europe
Is Crypto a Big Scam?
When the Uneasy Democratic Coalition Shares a Neighborhood
Democrats Could Codify Roe
Aboard the Trump Train
What’s It Like to Be a Red-State Abortion Doctor Post-Roe?
A Progressive Vision for the Economy
Biomedical Racism, Queer Theory, and the Monkeypox Epidemic
Progressives on Nancy Pelosi’s Taiwan Visit and US-China Policy
Behind the Manchin Miracle
What We May Never Know About Jan. 6
Vietnam to the Contras: The Life and Journalism of Robert Parry
Why Jason Kander Walked Away From Politics
How the Democrats Forgot the New Deal and Paved the Way for Trumpism
The Colombian Left Comes to Power
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
HauntingLive
Dr. Paul’s Worldviews
The Ben Shapiro Show
Morning Wire