-- -- -- / -- -- --
إدارة الموقع

Morocco Coded Message to Trump Warning of War with Algeria

Mohamed Moslem/English version: Dalila Henache
  • 812
  • 0
Morocco Coded Message to Trump Warning of War with Algeria

The Moroccan regime has finally woken up to the conviction that what it called “diplomatic victories” that it has been trumpeting to the Moroccan people did not bring it Western Sahara on a platter as it has been deceiving the world through its diplomatic and media arms, which prompted it to come up with a new surprise, which is warning of the outbreak of war in the region, and the reason is “as always” Algeria.

The news came from the Moroccan regime’s foreign minister, Nasser Bourita, who warned of a war he claimed Algeria might wage against his country during the presentation of his ministry’s draft budget for the fiscal year 2025 before the Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defense, Islamic Affairs, Migration and Moroccans Residing Abroad in the House of Representatives (parliament).

Bourita spoke, based on frequent Moroccan media reports, about “indications that Algeria wants to ignite a war in the region and enter into a military confrontation with Morocco.”

According to him, the reason is the imaginary recent victories of the Alawite regime, in what seemed to be a reference to the French position, which Macron expressed before and during his visit to the Alawite regime last month.

However, Bourita completely ignored the biggest blow that the Alawite regime has received in many years regarding the conflict in Western Sahara, which it considers its country’s first issue, represented by the decision of the European Court of Justice, which ruled that the kingdom has no sovereignty over the Sahrawi lands, a decision that is considered the strongest from a legal standpoint compared to the positions of political officials, which remain hostage to the person and not the institution.

In a rare case, the Moroccan regime attacked Algeria from the highest sovereign body represented by the palace and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in just three days. On Wednesday, November 6, 2024, the Moroccan King, Mohammed VI, said that “some people are exploiting the Sahara issue to cover up their many internal problems,” which clearly indicates that he was talking about Algeria.

The king’s statement was a source of ridicule on Algerian and even Moroccan social media because public opinion is wondering about the party that exports its problems abroad. The majority of them said that the Moroccan regime is trying to mislead the Moroccan people who are suffering from a severe housing crisis, stifling unemployment, unbearable poverty, and exorbitant prices that have prevented them from being able to provide even food and medicine, in addition to other necessities.

Even if the Moroccan monarch tried to accuse Algeria of exporting its problems, the man is not fully aware of what he was saying, because he also said in the same address, “Some parties demand a referendum, despite the United Nations abandoning it,” which confirms that he only reads what they write to him, and if he wrote his address, he would not have dared to write such words, because the United Nations currently only recognizes one project, which is the referendum, for which a mission called the “United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO)” was assigned, while the autonomy plan is still just an illusion that the United Nations fully ignores, as evidenced by the Secretary-General’s request, Antonio Guterres, for the Moroccan regime to submit a draft plan, but Rabat did not dare to submit it or even explain it.

The context of Bourita’s talk about the war in the region can be understood through the transformations that the world is currently witnessing, specifically the results of the recent presidential elections in the United States of America, which brought former President Donald Trump to the White House again, who pledged to stop the wars raging in the Middle East and Eastern Europe.

Add Comment

All fields are mandatory and your email will not be published. Please respect the privacy policy.

Your comment has been sent for review, it will be published after approval!
Comments
0
Sorry! There is no content to display!