Traffic policeman (de facto authorities) in Sanaa, Yemen. Photo: Peter Salisbury
2. Legitimacy
Legitimacy, the conferred right of a leader or institution to act on behalf of a population, is an important component in the construction of a stable political order. Weberian logic dictates that the defining characteristic of a state is a monopoly over the legitimate use of violence – for example, by official police and military forces – in the service of order and security. Legitimacy defines which political institutions and political actors are acceptable for a plurality of the population, and is essentially determined by the public’s perception.10 Within the context of fragmentary transformations of the state, however, all actors see themselves as legitimate, and seek to be perceived as such both locally and nationally.
In countries in the midst of such transformation, the ultimate goal of many actors is to become the unchallenged leader of either the formal state or a specific geographical entity within the boundaries of the de jure state – i.e. to become the executive. This requires a legitimacy that goes far beyond simply seizing control of territory through force, hijacking the bureaucracy or providing state-like services. It necessitates being perceived, both among the local population and powerful external actors, as the group that should rule. Rival claims to legitimacy are implicit in fragmentary transformations, and arguably form the most important overall arena of competition.
But how do rival groups actually compete for and attempt to build legitimacy? What does this mean in practical terms? To at least attempt to answer this question, this paper takes a multidimensional approach. Weber argues that legitimacy is founded on tradition (people’s faith in an authority, based on historic narratives), charisma (a leader’s personality and ideas, which charm or dominate the people), and legal-rational factors (i.e. whether the people perceive existing governing institutions, order and the rule of law to be in their best interest). In arenas of hybrid political order where the unitary state is challenged and fragmented, utilitarian legitimacy – via the provision of security and services – also becomes important. So, too, does international legitimacy – the recognition of a state by the UN Security Council, for example – as this can undermine or bolster political orders in such a way that local perceptions change.
To explore the nature of competition, this chapter analyses three key forms of legitimacy: legal-rational, utilitarian and international. Actors in Iraq and Yemen compete for popular legitimacy at the local and national level, employing a wide range of techniques. A particular actor need not embody every single condition or attribute to be legitimate enough to sustain its position, and it can also alternate from one from of legitimacy to another according to need and circumstance. International policymakers will be better equipped to assist in state-building and peacebuilding if they understand which actors can represent populations based on which criteria. (Note: We explore the other two components of legitimacy highlighted by Weber – tradition and charisma – in the section on ‘persuasive power’ in Chapter 4.)
Legal-rational legitimacy in Iraq and Yemen
Despite a general understanding that domestic legal institutions often carry little weight, executives and the formal bureaucracy still compete with de facto authorities in Iraq and Yemen to participate in or fully control formal state institutions, which they view as markers of legitimacy. Local populations continue to express a general desire to see state presence, even if the state is weak and contested.
Iraq
In Iraq, the idea of the state remains strong. Following the US-led invasion in 2003, many Iraqis who supported regime change did not support the destruction of the state.11 One of the main criticisms of the post-2003 order has been the lack of strong state institutions.12 Indeed, in a survey that asked Iraqis who should be the most legitimate leader, most respondents said a leader should be chosen through free and fair elections (see Figure 4). This suggests that Iraqis still believe in state institutions and their capacity as the ultimate indicator of legitimacy.
Figure 4: Iraq – most important factor for ruling authority’s legitimacy
The legacies of statehood from the 20th century are influential, as are the legacies of institutions pre-dating the formation of the Iraqi state itself. Many Iraqis believe in the formal aspects of a government, a judiciary and legal mechanisms. Since 2003, international policymakers have pushed for provincial decentralization and asymmetric federalism as a solution to the apparent chaos in Iraq. However, Iraqis have consistently rejected provincial decentralization and any weakening of the central bureaucracy. In a countrywide survey in 2015 – when the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) was at the peak of its powers, and the Iraqi state at its lowest point since 2003 – 51 per cent of respondents said that their central government should have more authority; only 25 per cent claimed that local governments should be granted more authority.13
The case of Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) reveals the importance of legal-rational factors in conferred legitimacy. This umbrella group was established in June 2014 by the then prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, from seven paramilitary units that had been acting as de facto authorities for several years. The paramilitary leaders under the PMU worked to acquire greater state recognition. On several occasions they pressured Maliki’s successor, Haider al-Abadi, to recognize the PMU as part of the formal bureaucracy.14 During this period, they detested the label ‘militia’ because, according to the Iraqi constitution, militias are illegal and thus not state actors. They wanted to be perceived by Iraqis as part of the state.
That ambition was duly achieved in November 2016, when the Iraqi parliament passed a law officially recognizing the PMU as an armed force of the state. Many Iraqis would not support armed groups outside the law, yet with the enactment of this law, the PMU was able to enshrine its longer-term project as a state-recognized force in Iraq. The legitimacy thus conferred on the PMU as a result of becoming a state actor, rather than being categorized as a militia, is linked to the legal-rational factor.
Yemen
In the case of Yemen, contested legitimacy has helped drive the country further towards the ‘chaos’ end of the chaos–order spectrum. In 2011, a large number of Yemenis took to the streets demanding the removal of the regime of the then-president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, and a reconfiguration of both the executive (on the basis of democratic elections) and the institutions of the state. This caused a schism within the Saleh regime, leading to a two-year, internationally overseen transitional period led by Saleh’s successor, Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi. However, in September 2014 Saleh and the Houthis seized the capital, Sanaa. A peace deal negotiated by the UN was meant to lead to power-sharing, but Hadi later fled the capital after being placed under house arrest.
In the case of Yemen, contested legitimacy has helped drive the country further towards the ‘chaos’ end of the chaos–order spectrum.
Today, Yemen’s elites and would-be executives hope to have their own institutions of state recognized as legitimate. To this end, they have captured and reformed existing institutions and built new ones. The Houthis, the administration of President Hadi, and latterly the secessionist Southern Transitional Council (STC) have all argued that their authority is conferred on them through the country’s institutions.15 Hadi points to his election in a (one-man) poll in February 2012, and to an April 2015 UN Security Council resolution that names him as the ‘legitimate’ president. The government describes itself as the shara’ia, or ‘the legitimacy’.16 The Houthis, meanwhile, effectively seized control of state institutions from September 2014 onwards, signing a deal with the Hadi administration that gave them a pathway to participation in the government. Subsequently, in February 2015, they issued a ‘constitutional declaration’ forming new bodies that included a transitional executive, known as the Supreme Revolutionary Council. The Hadi government and the Houthis each have their own parliament (the members of which consist of legislators elected in 2003) and Shura, or advisory councils. The STC, meanwhile, is attempting to build its own institutions, including a southern National Assembly.
Figure 5: Yemen – most important factors for ruling authority’s legitimacy
Utilitarian legitimacy: the bureaucracy and the de facto authorities
The weakening of the unitary state and the emergence of de facto authorities challenge the formal bureaucracy, which is no longer the only actor that can provide security or essential services. As a result, armed and other actors seeking legitimacy often focus on providing services as a way of gaining the right to speak on behalf of a local population. This ‘utilitarian legitimacy’ is a product of ‘capability’, discussed in further detail in the next chapter of this paper. While in other contexts legitimacy based on the provision of essential state services – electricity, water, etc. – would belong in the legal-rational category, in a hybrid/fragmented political order utilitarian legitimacy is a separate attribute in its own right.
Unlike legal-rational legitimacy, utilitarian legitimacy tends to be short-lived: actors often cannot provide services for long periods. When armed actors, for example, have gained popularity by providing services or protection, they typically are unable to sustain their position without tapping into other forms of legitimacy. This partly explains why most then seek to take over the formal bureaucracy as part of the transformation.
Iraq
In the 20th century the Iraqi state was hostage to rentierism, relying on oil and gas revenues to become the central provider of basic services and welfare to its citizens. Many Iraqis viewed the state in effect as a bank, which would pay a salary and provide services without levying taxes. During the Baathist years, the state was instrumental in all aspects of economic life, whether directly transacting with citizens or granting licences and permissions to private-sector providers. The majority of Iraqis expected not only their water and electricity, but also their income, to come from the state.
War and fragmentation have since led to an increase in attempts by the executive to build utilitarian legitimacy. Public-sector employment was estimated at 1.2 million in 2003. But by 2015 that figure had more than doubled, with 3 million Iraqis receiving a salary from the state.17 In this sense, more Iraqis were indeed using the state as a de facto bank.18
After almost two decades with a government that cannot provide basic services, from water to electricity, many Iraqis have become willing to confer their support on any actor that can help provide such services in the short term.
Despite the rise in public-sector employment, after 2003 the state was not the only provider of essential services. Many Iraqis searched and found alternative providers of basic services and income. Armed actors filled this gap without necessarily requiring permission or licensing from the state. They paid their members and their patronage networks, and provided services in the localities where the state had minimal reach. In doing so, these groups acquired utilitarian legitimacy. In a 2019 Chatham House survey, respondents across Iraq argued that providing services was the third most important quality for a legitimate leader.19 After almost two decades with a government that cannot provide basic services, from water to electricity, many Iraqis have become willing to confer their support on any actor that can help provide such services in the short term.
The swift rise of ISIS offers an extreme example of a similar legitimization process. In June 2014, when the Salafi-jihadi organization took over the city of Mosul, its first priority was restoring security and providing basic services (primarily water and electricity) as quickly as possible. To many local residents, this was initially welcome. One Sunni resident said, ‘ISIS with all its brutality is more honest and merciful than the Shia government in Baghdad and its militias.’20 Another resident said, ‘There were no more car bombs, no clashes and no IEDs […] Mosul is at peace finally. They control the streets and people are awestruck. They allow people to leave Mosul, and schools are teaching government curriculums.’21
However, this situation did not last long. ISIS’s brutal regime, coupled with its inability to maintain essential services, meant that popular support for/tolerance of its presence began to wane (as it did not gain the other forms of legitimacy). The story of ISIS therefore reveals the limits of utilitarian legitimacy. Lacking legitimacy from other sources, a group will struggle to maintain popularity strictly through the provision of services and security.
Yemen
Yemen’s central governments have a relatively short history of providing services beyond policing. In southern Yemen, electricity supply did not extend beyond the cities of Aden or Mukalla until the 1980s. In the 1970s and 1980s, local services in the north of the country were provided through autonomous local development councils, funded through remittances.22 These councils were later integrated into the state, in part because the government hoped to benefit from the resources they had at their disposal, and also to mitigate the threat of potential rivals to the state. Yemen therefore has only a 30-year history of ‘state services’ in the conventional sense of the term. Despite some improvements, by the 2000s Yemenis outside the capital were accustomed to providing their own electricity through generators, while water trucked in from private providers was in wide use in both urban and rural Yemen.23 The main social goods provided by the government were state salaries (for around 1.25 million people) and fuel subsidies.24
Service provision and the failure to provide services have been exploited repeatedly by non-state actors as a means of garnering support for their own agendas and undermining the legitimacy of the formal state. In 2011 and 2012, Yemen’s local Al-Qaeda franchise experimented with service delivery, including provision of electricity and water, in the southern town of Zinjibar.25 When the Houthis entered Sanaa in 2014, they did so under the pretext of wanting to overturn a corrupt government and ensure a more equitable division of the country’s resources – an adaptation of protesters’ demands for reform during Yemen’s ‘Arab Spring’ in 2011.26 When the Houthis seized Sanaa, electricity supply briefly improved and fuel prices were cut, giving them a temporary popularity boost. When the current war began, Al-Qaeda affiliates seized control of another southern city, Mukalla, where they focused on service delivery and humanitarian work and set up their own courts system.27 Al-Qaeda was pushed out of Mukalla in April 2016, however.
Elsewhere, the governor of Mareb has become popular thanks to his management of revenues from local oil and gas production facilities, which he has used to provide electricity, improve healthcare and education, and pay for infrastructure upgrades.28 The internationally recognized government has struggled to make a similar impact in Aden, the main city ostensibly under its control. In August 2019, secessionists with strong ties with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) seized government military bases and institutions in and around Aden, alleging government corruption and infiltration by ‘terrorist’ elements. They later pushed into neighbouring Abyan and Shabwa governorates.
The Houthis, meanwhile, have been widely criticized by those under their control, a uniform complaint being that the state no longer provides any discernible services beyond security.29 Electricity supply is absent, hospitals are funded and staffed by international NGOs, state wages go unpaid, and fuel prices are at near-record highs amid shortages of supply. In the words of one Sanaa resident: ‘If they paid just some wages and provided some services, and if they were seen to do so, they would be much more popular. But they provide nothing, they tax heavily, and they have made a police state. All the taxes are used for war and to oppress people.’30 Yet residents in Houthi-controlled areas also note the relative security of the canton, and disorder elsewhere, and have not mounted major protests against Houthi rule.31 Both the Hadi government and the Houthis blame each other for the lack of services nationwide, while the southern secessionist STC has blamed what it terms Hadi’s ‘corruption government’ for these problems while presenting itself as a viable governance alternative before and since its August 2019 takeover of Aden.
International legitimacy
In international relations, de jure recognition has been the defining feature of statehood, and much more relevant than the de facto capacities outlined by the Montevideo Convention, which decrees that the state should possess ‘(a) a permanent population; (b) a defined territory; (c) government; and (d) capacity to enter into relations with the other states’. In certain cases, international actors recognize state leaders who may not enjoy the other forms of legitimacy, and these state leaders then rely on their external alliances to maintain some claim to speak on behalf of their constituents. In Iraq and Yemen, international recognition thus becomes another way of gaining a right to represent a population and to become the executive. Leaders can gain additional legitimacy among their domestic constituents by claiming to have the support of influential regional or international players. At times, actors that lack de facto power can still maintain de jure legitimacy due to their alliances and close relations with external patrons or allies. As such, an overreliance on international legitimacy widens the gap between de jure and de facto authorities, as the former become less reliant on legal-rational or utilitarian legitimacy, creating the space for the latter to fill.
In other cases, however, actors that lack de jure recognition can still gain legitimacy via international alliances. For instance, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq is a sub-state actor rather than a de jure state actor. However, the KRG’s leadership engages in diplomatic relations and uses its foreign relations portfolio domestically in a bid to acquire and maintain greater legitimacy among its local constituents.32
But when an actor is deemed illegitimate by powerful states because of the threat it poses (or is seen to pose), it can face military action, hastening its demise or leaving it in an embattled position. This was the case for the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq. It has also proven true for Al-Qaeda, ISIS and the Houthis during their respective periods of territorial control.
International support has become an important feature of the legitimization process for incumbent executives. Once provided, this legitimation can help sustain the rule of otherwise weak leaders and can be used to attack rivals. Yet, when combined with support in the form of military and financial resources, it may also create an artificial balance of power that becomes a barrier to state–society relations and bargaining between elite groups, both also important parts of legitimization. More critically, an actor cannot survive on international recognition alone. Like utilitarian legitimacy, international legitimacy tends to be short-lived unless complemented by other forms of legitimacy. Protest movements in Iraq have revealed the extent to which local populations can direct their grievances at the elite and complain about interference from foreign actors, whether the US, Iran or others. In such cases, international recognition can in fact do the opposite: make the leader(s) seem illegitimate.
Iraq
Iraqi politics after 2003 became intertwined with regional and international politics, as the weakening of the state made it more susceptible to external influences. For the first year after the US-led invasion, the American Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), led by Paul Bremer, became the sovereign of Iraq. During this period, all political actors in Baghdad required strong relations with the foreign sovereign if they were to be deemed legitimate. Conversely, many actors whom the CPA did not recognize, such as Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, stood minimal chance of participating in the political process. Although sovereign power was handed back to Iraqis in 2004, international actors continued to support (and work against) domestic political actors. As such, in the early years of the war Iraqi politicians often felt that they needed the support of Washington in order to succeed in political life.
Over the years, international actors would also act as kingmakers in government formation in Iraq. In 2005, 2010, 2014 and 2018, countries such as the US, Iran, Turkey and the Gulf states played pivotal roles in supporting the ascent of certain leaders. While the US had more of a say in the early years after the invasion, in recent times Iran has become the primary kingmaker in Iraqi politics. As an aide to former prime minister Haider al-Abadi told one of this paper’s co-authors: ‘One of our mistakes was getting so close to the Americans, when Iran was really calling the shots for the next government.’33 After the 2018 election, Abadi was unable to remain as prime minister. Partly, this was because his party had not won the election; however, more critically, it also reflected a veto from Tehran. This loss of Iranian support further undermined Abadi’s domestic legitimacy. As a senior political leader confirmed, ‘To be successful in politics in Iraq, you must be friendly with Iran.’34
For all Iraqi political parties, therefore, a strong international relations portfolio became an important tool for maintaining domestic legitimacy. Some parties focused excessively on foreign relations. For instance, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) used the strength of its relations with the US and Turkey to increase its capabilities and demonstrate to its constituents that the party was now on the world stage. This form of international recognition gave Masoud Barzani, the leader of the KDP, considerable legitimacy in the eyes of his people and encouraged the party to focus its communications efforts on publicizing his relations with world leaders.
However, international legitimacy has distinct limitations. Like utilitarian legitimacy, it reflects the weakening of state institutions. It can also reflect the increased influence of foreign actors within a country. Actors that rely solely on international legitimacy will not be able to maintain their standing for very long. For instance, in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, between 2014 and the present, the failures of the KDP’s utilitarian and legal-rational legitimacy affected its international legitimacy. As several protesters told one of the co-authors: ‘The Barzanis care more about appeasing foreigners than providing their people with basic services and salaries.’35 At some point, then, the KDP had to shift its focus back to utilitarian and legal-rational legitimacy.
Yemen
International recognition and support have also played an outsized role in the process of legitimizing successive Yemeni leaders. From the early 2000s onwards, external support for the presidency, from the US in particular, strengthened Saleh’s hand against potential rivals during a period when intra-elite competition was becoming visible in Sanaa, and when regional challengers such as the Houthis and southern secessionists were also emerging. Saleh sought to limit Western officials’ contact with any group that might criticize the regime or undermine his own characterization of the country as a complex, tribal place that only he could manage.36 In particular, his role as a counterterrorism partner allowed him to sustain his position, with Western diplomats aware of the weakness of his government but worried that without him the power vacuum would embolden Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).37 When it became clear in 2011, however, that civil war was likely if he was left in power, the Western position shifted. Saleh’s vice-president, Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who was seen as pliant by both the international community and local elites, was installed in his place. Hadi would receive almost limitless support during the subsequent transitional period.
Following the September 2014 Houthi–Saleh takeover of Sanaa, Hadi retained his post, but his power and arguably his legal-rational legitimacy became increasingly nominal. Yet Western governments did not describe what was increasingly clearly a coup as such, as doing so would have forced an end to counterterrorism cooperation and would likely have caused the collapse of the Yemeni political transition. For some Yemenis, this appeared to translate into international acceptance of the Houthis. In January 2015, after being placed under house arrest in Sanaa, Hadi announced that he had resigned from the presidency.
He later fled to Aden and rescinded his resignation, calling for the Gulf states to come to his aid in the Yemen war, invoking Chapter 7 of the UN charter (which deals with the legitimate use of force) and, in effect, authorizing Gulf intervention. In April 2015, the UN Security Council passed a new resolution that described Hadi as Yemen’s ‘legitimate president’, underlining international support for him.38 But diplomats have come to describe the resolution as a ‘millstone’.39 The same Security Council resolution calls for the Houthis to effectively surrender and hand control of the state back to the Hadi government. This has made negotiations under the auspices of the UN highly problematic, as the Hadi government regularly invokes the resolution as a fait accompli despite its weak position on the ground. The August 2019 STC takeover of Aden has made this stance even more problematic, with the international community bound to the legitimacy of a leader who has lost control of both the de jure and transitional capital cities of his country.