Yemen has received 2015 with deadly bombings that killed around 200 people and injured scores of others in the first week of the year. The casualties included 40 dead and 71 injured from the blast at the Police College this week. 2014 was the bloodiest year in the country with reports talking about thousands of people including soldiers killed throughout the year mostly in the battles between the Houthi militants. Analysts argued that the local factions and foreign transition backers have been giving more attention to political reconciliation than achieving an effective restructuring of the armed forces. No political deals and no dialog outcomes will be brought into effect if there is not united, strong forces, they added. Transition President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi started a restructuring of the national forces in 2012; the situation has been deteriorating though. Analysts, however, said the restructuring of the Yemeni forces has not been based on scientific standards which are supposed to take into account requirements to build competent forces not only develop their structure. Mohsen Khostouf, a retired military officer, said a successful restructuring of the forces should depend on both combat and structural strategies. Though the Gulf Initiative for power transition identified two things to restructure the Yemeni forces including building a professional army, what Hadi could do included merging some of the divided units. Even Hadi's focus on the forces' structure was restricted to changing chiefs, mostly from the former corrupt officers, without paying attention to other elements of this part of the process such as improving transparency over the military spending. The result is that Hadi is still unable to unite all forces and gain their loyalty and such a matter has been reflected on the country's stability. "No leader can succeed in building a stable country if he can't guarantee the unity and loyalty of all national forces," Khosrouf said. Among the problems with the Yemeni forces are a systematic destruction of some units on the ground these forces have not been loyal to the government and the presence of militias and tribesmen within key units. The government has stayed silent while some factions were raiding and looting military bases a matter which made it easy for violent groups such as Al-Qaeda to take advantage, infiltrate into key military and security apparatuses and then carry out deadly attacks. Wrong decisions on the national forces led in September to the fall of the capital Sanaa in hands of the Houthi Militant Group. The group assigned its militias to do the job of the authorities including the fight against terrorism. Khosrouf said one of the key reasons for raging violence was when the forces authorized militants to do their responsibility. "Militants don't have suitable skills and can't replace the forces," he said. As Houthis are continuing to tighten their grip on power, analyses warned of further division and destruction of the Yemeni forces which means more massacres and bloodbath will inevitable.