Ali Abdullah Saleh

Ali Abdullah Saleh
علي عبدالله صالح
Saleh in 1988
1st President of Yemen
In office
22 May 1990 – 25 February 2012
Prime Minister
Vice President
Preceded by
Succeeded byAbdrabbuh Mansour Hadi
4th President of North Yemen
In office
18 July 1978 – 22 May 1990
Prime Minister
  • Abdul Aziz Abdul Ghani
  • Abd Al-Karim Al-Iryani
  • Abdul Aziz Abdul Ghani
Vice PresidentAbdul Karim Abdullah al-Arashi
Preceded byAbdul Karim Abdullah al-Arashi
Succeeded byHimself as President of Yemen
Chairman of the General People's Congress
In office
24 August 1982 – 4 December 2017
Disputed with Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi starting 21 October 2015
Preceded byParty established
Succeeded bySadeq Amin Abu Rass
Personal details
BornAli Abdullah Saleh
(1947-03-21)21 March 1947
Beit al-Ahmar, Sanhan District, Kingdom of Yemen (North Yemen).
Died4 December 2017(2017-12-04) (aged 70)
Sanaa, Yemen
Manner of deathAssassination by firearm
PartyGeneral People's Congress
Spouse
Asma
(m. 1964)
Children7, including Ahmed
NicknameAffash
Military service
Allegiance Kingdom of Yemen (1958–1962)
Yemen Arab Republic (1962–1990)
Yemen (1990–2017)
Years of service1958–2017
RankField marshal
Battles/wars
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with deprecated parameter "serviceyears". Replace with "service_years".
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with deprecated parameter "honorific-prefix". Replace with "honorific_prefix".
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with deprecated parameter "primeminister". Replace with "prime_minister".
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with deprecated parameter "vicepresident2". Replace with "vice_president2".
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with deprecated parameter "primeminister2". Replace with "prime_minister2".
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with deprecated parameter "vicepresident". Replace with "vice_president".

Ali Abdullah Saleh (21 March 1947 – 4 December 2017) was a Yemeni military officer and politician who served as the first president of the Republic of Yemen from the Yemeni unification in 1990 until his resignation in 2012, following the Yemeni revolution. Previously, he had served as the fifth and last President of the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen), from July 1978 to 22 May 1990, after the assassination of President Ahmad al-Ghashmi. al-Ghashmi had earlier appointed Saleh as military governor in Taiz.

A veteran and officer of the North Yemen civil war, Saleh consolidated power and restored civilian rule after al-Ghashmi's assassination in 1978. Despite military defeat against South Yemen in the Second Yemenite War, a rebellion, and multiple coup attempts, Saleh, though challenged with stagnant economic growth and significant poverty, had managed to bring stability to North Yemen by the mid 1980's, and enjoyed support from both the United States and the Soviet Union. After South Yemen had become unstable following the 1986 crisis and the fall of communism, Saleh achieved reunification as President of the new Republic of Yemen, sharing power in tandem with South Yemen's last leader and transitional Vice President Ali Salem al-Beidh, prominent general Mohsen al-Ahmar and tribal Sheikh and leader of the Islamist Islah movement, Abdullah al-Ahmar, through a Presidential Council. Due to apparent North–South divisions, al-Beidh left the Council in 1993, and in the brief civil war that followed, Saleh's forces, assisted by jihadists such as the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, roundly defeated Southern forces in July 1994.

From 1994 onward, Saleh returned to autocratic rule through rule by decree, and was confirmed by elections in 1999, 2006, and a controversial constitutional referendum in 2001. Until 2011, he presided over stable economic growth and an insurgency by the Ansar Allah movement, commonly known as the Houthis. As President of unified Yemen, Saleh and the Presidential Council alienated the US and Saudi governments by expressing opposition to the Gulf War, which prompted an exodus of over 800,000 Yemenis from Saudi Arabia, but after Saleh consolidated absolute power, he developed deeper ties with Western powers, especially the United States, during the war on terror. Subsequently, evidence emerged that Islamic terrorism may have been used and encouraged by Saleh in order to win Western support and for disruptive politically motivated attacks. In 2011, in the wake of the Arab Spring, which spread across North Africa and the Middle East (including Yemen), Saleh's time in office became increasingly precarious, until he was eventually ousted as president in 2012. He was succeeded by Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, who had been serving as vice president since 1994, and acting president since 2011.

Himself a Zaydi Shia Muslim, Saleh openly allied with the Houthis in May 2015 during the Yemeni civil war, in which a protest movement and subsequent insurgency succeeded in capturing Yemen's capital, Sanaa, causing President Hadi to resign and flee the country. In December 2017, he declared his withdrawal from his coalition with the Houthis and instead sided with his former enemies – Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and President al-Hadi.

On 4 December 2017, during a battle between Houthi and Saleh supporters in Sanaa, the Houthis accused Saleh of treason, and he was killed by a Houthi sniper. Reports were that Saleh was killed while trying to flee his compound in a car; however, this was denied by his party officials, who said he was killed at his house.