Houthi elites do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by speaking in moral languages that present authority as duty. Fidelity to the Quranic way. Loyalty to the Ahl al-Bayt. Defense of Yemen against foreign aggression. Commitment to the Axis of Resistance. These are not just beliefs. They are coalition tools.
This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control. In the Houthi movement, the key languages are the Sarkha slogan, Zaydi revivalism, and anti-imperialist resistance. Ansar Allah is not framed as a local governing force. It is framed as a vanguard in a civilizational struggle. Whoever defines what resistance requires controls the strongest legitimating language available.
The shift from local insurgency to jurisdictional war becomes unmistakable after October 2023. What had been framed as technical questions about missiles and maritime disruption turned into a direct struggle over the movement’s purpose. Is Ansar Allah an arm of a regional resistance axis or a governing authority responsible for millions of Yemenis? That question has never been answered. It has only been fought over.
The movement presents itself as unified under Abdul-Malik al-Houthi. In practice it is a structured arena of competition. Power flows from the top through military commanders, tribal alliances, and administrative bodies. No faction rejects the resistance narrative. They fight over what it means, who interprets it, and which priorities follow. The hierarchy pushes these conflicts upward into decisions on Red Sea operations, escalation against the United States and Israel, and responses to external strikes.
Three domains concentrate the struggle.
First is doctrinal authority. The hardline coalition, rooted in the al-Houthi family, core revivalist figures, and strict readers of Hussein al-Houthi’s Malazim, uses the language of purity and divine mandate. Its claim is that the movement’s principles were not constructed but revealed. The Sarkha, the rejection of foreign influence, and total opposition to the United States and Israel are treated as fixed commitments handed down at a specific historical moment. Any adjustment for governance or alliance-building is betrayal.
The 2017 break with and assassination of Ali Abdullah Saleh made the jurisdictional stakes visible. The purge that followed was not presented as factional consolidation. It was framed as protection of the revolution from treason. That framing matters. It turns political elimination into ideological hygiene, and it gives the hardline coalition a template for disciplining dissent that it has used ever since.
The pragmatic-nationalist coalition, composed of tribal leaders, Sunni-allied commanders, and administrators focused on local stability, saw the same events as exclusion. In their account, central leadership used the language of purity to remove rival political and tribal elements, often with encouragement from Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps networks. The dispute is not about whether resistance matters. It is about who gets to define its limits.
Alliance Theory clarifies the move. By tying legitimacy to doctrinal purity, the hardline coalition claims exclusive interpretive authority. Arguments about Yemeni unity or humanitarian limits are recoded as deviations. The Axis of Resistance functions as a jurisdictional extension, importing authority from a broader ideological network and deploying it to discipline internal dissent. A commander who questions an operation is not making a tactical judgment. He is failing a test of loyalty.
Stephen Turner’s critique lands directly here. The hardline claim depends on the idea that a determinate revolutionary essence has been transmitted intact from the founding moment. Turner’s point is that nothing like that transmission exists. The Malazim are not a fixed code. They are a body of material selected and emphasized differently by competing actors across different contexts. What is presented as faithful transmission is strategic interpretation. The appeal to an unbroken ideological essence is a claim to authority dressed as continuity.
The pragmatic coalition offers its own reconstruction. It argues that the movement was always adaptive, shaped by local Yemeni conditions, and must remain so. Disputes over the scope of Red Sea operations show the divide in its sharpest form. Hardliners frame maximal confrontation as fidelity to the prophetic mission. Pragmatists warn of famine, international isolation, and the slow collapse of a population the movement claims to defend. Both invoke the same founding tradition. Neither admits the selection.
Between them sits a governance bloc that speaks in the language of viability. Its concern is not purity or expansion but keeping the system functioning well enough to retain popular support. It gains influence when internal strain becomes visible and loses it when ideological momentum surges.
Second is centralized military command. This is where doctrine turns into force, and where the internal architecture of the movement matters most.
The leadership around Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, supported by aligned commanders and Iranian advisory channels, claims authority over all targeting and escalation decisions. Its language is unity, discipline, and global coordination. The claim is that a movement confronting the United States, Israel, and Saudi Arabia cannot afford fragmentation. By framing Red Sea attacks as part of a global resistance mission rather than a local tactical choice, central command converts compliance into loyalty and disagreement into deviation.
The current pause in maritime strikes, now running for several weeks following the outbreak of direct U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran in late February 2026, shows this mechanism operating in real time. The silence is not presented as restraint. It is framed as strategic patience, sabr strategic, the vanguard holding its force in reserve for a divinely timed blow. Central command has used the pause to redistribute missile and drone assets to fortified positions in Hodeidah and Hajjah with minimal digital footprints. The move redefines authentic resistance as institutional resilience rather than continuous escalation. That redefinition is itself a jurisdictional claim.
Opposing the centralized coalition is a regional autonomy bloc among tribal and local commanders. Their language is context and local representation. They do not reject central authority in principle. They challenge its reach into matters they argue fall within appropriate local discretion. The core jurisdictional fight is over classification. If Red Sea operations are doctrinal, the center controls them. If they are operational, local commanders retain discretion. That distinction determines who has final authority, which is why both sides fight so hard over it.
A third bloc focuses on enforcement integrity. Orders that cannot be followed weaken the entire command structure regardless of their content. For this group, the organizational principle matters more than the specific operation.
Third is territorial governance. This is where ideology meets daily life. Courts, ports, media outlets, and aid distribution systems form a governing apparatus across millions of people, and they are also the terrain where the movement’s internal contradictions become hardest to manage.
The mission-driven coalition treats these institutions as vehicles of resistance. Their purpose is not neutral administration but ideological transmission and support for the broader struggle. Staffing, resource allocation, and public messaging must align with that mission and remain accountable to the central leadership rather than to external humanitarian or tribal pressures.
The professionalized coalition pushes back with the language of sustainability. A governing system that cannot deliver aid, maintain exchange rates, or retain public support collapses, and a collapsed governing system serves no one’s resistance. The administrators in Sanaa who point to stable food volumes at Red Sea ports as evidence of effective governance are making a jurisdictional claim just as much as the hardliners who point to civil defense drills as proof that the movement remains a war machine. Each reconstructs institutional purpose from the same historical materials. Each presents its reconstruction as the authentic one.
Turner’s critique applies across all three domains. Every coalition claims to know what the movement really is. A revolutionary vanguard. A national authority. A hybrid system serving both. These are not discoveries. They are constructed positions built from selective readings of the same founding moment, the same Malazim, the same history of resistance and survival. What looks like principle is selection plus emphasis.
Across all three domains the pattern holds. Every coalition claims authority by asserting access to something essential. Divine truth. Authentic resistance. Coordination capacity. Local knowledge. Administrative competence. Each presents its claim as necessity rather than interest. Each denies that it is competing for control.
What makes the Houthi case distinct is the resistance frame’s intensity. Every dispute is elevated. Tactical disagreements become questions of faithfulness. Administrative tradeoffs become tests of loyalty. When Houthi spokesman Yahya Sarea warned on March 20 that American warships will be targeted if the United States joins Israel against Iran, he was not just issuing a military threat. He was using a jurisdictional technology, framing any international naval presence not as freedom of navigation but as a pro-Zionist attempt to control the region. That framing allows the movement to discipline internal pragmatists. Any commander who suggests de-escalation to protect local shipping can be branded as an agent of the maritime architecture the movement exists to resist.
The movement is not governed by a single unified will. It is held together by competing coalitions operating within a strict hierarchy, each using a different moral language to justify control over its master institutions. The tensions visible in purges, targeting debates, and governance struggles are not signs of breakdown. They are the operating equilibrium.
The jurisdictional wars continue. They are not fought in the open. They are fought through doctrine, command, and administration, and they determine who gets to define what resistance means in practice and who holds the institutional position to make that definition binding across Houthi-controlled Yemen.
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