
Gaza Genocide: Moroccan Support for Israel Ties Plummets
In Morocco, support for diplomatic alliance with Israel plummeted from 31% in 2022 to just 13% following the Al-Aqsa Flood operation on October 7, 2023.
The poll also reveals a sharp decline in favorability toward Israel's Western allies. Positive views of the United Kingdom dropped by 38 points and those of France fell by 10 points in Morocco.
Meanwhile, in Jordan, Mauritania, and Lebanon, the United States saw its popularity decline by 23, 19, and 15 points respectively. This backlash stems largely from the US's unwavering support for Israel's genocide in Gaza—through arms supplies, narrative backing, diplomatic protection, and five vetoes against ceasefire resolutions—rendering it a direct accomplice in the ongoing atrocities.
Conversely, the survey reports a favorable shift towards China – a power rivaling US and Western hegemony and one of the few global actors to openly condemn Israel's actions. China's favorability surged across the MENA, with a 15 points increase in Morocco alone.
The survey also confirms that Israel's atrocities have deepened regional support for the Palestinian cause and heightened condemnation for Israel. In Morocco, a clear majority now recognize Israel's actions in Gaza as genocide and ethnic cleansing.
Interestingly, majorities across nearly all surveyed countries still express support for a two-state solution, even in the wake of its ongoing genocide in Gaza.
Though often framed as the most viable resolution, the two-state solution remains deeply controversial. It legitimizes Israel's occupation and the ethnic cleansing that began in 1948, reduces Palestinian self-determination to a fragmented, non-sovereign entity on just 22% of historic Palestine. This framework also represents Israel and Palestine as equal negotiating partners, thus obscuring the reality of ongoing military occupation and apartheid.
More fundamentally, the two-state framework directly contradicts al-thawabit al-wataniyya— the principles at the core Palestinian national principles—which uphold the right of return for all refugees, full sovereignty over all of historic Palestine, and the refusal to recognize Israel as a legitimate settler-colonial entity.
These thawabit, or constants, forged through generations of resistance, affirm that justice cannot be achieved through partition or compromise with colonialism. The two-state model bypasses these foundational demands, offering instead a Western-backed framework that entrenches Israeli supremacy and validates the outcomes of dispossession.
Ultimately the study concludes a widening rift between public opinion and official policy. While Arab governments continue to avoid direct confrontation with Israel, the backlash from their own populations has become a growing obstacle to cooperation with Israel.
Anatomy of a genocide
Israel used the Al-Aqsa Flood operation as a pretext to escalate its aggression. But its live-streamed atrocities have stripped away decades of propaganda, exposing its crimes in real time to the world—and especially to the region it has terrorized since its founding.
For people across the MENA region—who have lived through Israel's violent creation, from the Nakba, successive land grabs to the wars, intifadas, and repeated assaults on Gaza—October 7 reignited condemnation and reawakened political consciousness. It educated a new generation on the atrocities Israel has long sought to erase, along with the indigenous trees it uproots and the indigenous people it kills.
However, the genocide in Gaza goes on as Israel and its allies continue to weaponize antisemitism and the legacy of Europe's Holocaust to shield themselves from accountability while committing atrocities that would make even Hitler blush.
The official death toll remains over 56,000 Palestinians killed since October 2023. But the real number is likely far higher, as thousands remain buried under rubble or have been blown apart—never making it to morgues or registries. Many will never be counted, never be named, and never be laid to rest.
UNICEF estimates that at least 50,000 children have been killed or injured. This is not mere 'collateral damage' — it is a deliberate strategy at the heart of Israel's genocidal project: to annihilate the possibility of a Palestinian future. With famine manufactured by Israel and a deadly shortage of baby formula, hundreds of children await their death sentence before they've even had a chance to live.
To deflect international criticism, Israel introduced the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation—a US-Israel-backed initiative that places Palestinian survival in the hands of the very powers carrying out their destruction.
Palestinians and independent aid groups have already described GHF sites as death zones. Since their launch in late May, reports—including testimony from Israeli soldiers in Israeli media—confirm that troops were ordered to shoot Palestinians approaching these aid points. Yet, in the face of starvation, many Palestinians are left with no choice but to risk death for the chance of receiving food.
Even the aid reaching Gaza is poisoned. Experts inside the Strip report finding OxyContin—a powerful, addictive opioid— mixed into flour bags. A cruel tactic seeking to inflict further suffering on a population barely clinging to life, aiming to shatter Gazans' will and tear apart their social fabric from within.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
![Sahara : When Algeria sides with a Zionist to undermine Morocco [Editorial]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fstatic.yabiladi.com%2Ffiles%2Farticles%2Fyabiladi.e18af44351b6c8ed5c192cff180af42220250708155843.webp&w=3840&q=100)
![Sahara : When Algeria sides with a Zionist to undermine Morocco [Editorial]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fstatic-mobile-files.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com%2Fyabiladi.png&w=48&q=75)
Ya Biladi
6 hours ago
- Ya Biladi
Sahara : When Algeria sides with a Zionist to undermine Morocco [Editorial]
In recent days, Algerian state media (notably APS) have eagerly amplified John Bolton's call for a revival of a self-determination referendum in Western Sahara. The former neoconservative hawk, known for his hardline opposition to the United Nations, unwavering support for Israel, and aggressive stance toward the Arab world, is now being portrayed - through Algeria's official voice - as an unlikely ally on one of its core foreign policy issues. The irony is glaring, and this alignment raises more questions than it answers. John Bolton is a symbol of political Zionism in Washington, a champion of moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, a vocal supporter of U.S.-led wars in the Middle East, and a staunch advocate for Israeli interests. He embodies everything the Algerian regime claims to oppose: Western imperialism, aggression against Arab nations, and most of all, Israeli policies toward Palestinians. Yet Algiers, which touts its support for Palestine as a cornerstone of its diplomacy, has chosen to celebrate the very man who stands in ideological opposition to those values. Palestine Sacrificed on the Altar of the Polisario This isn't just an ideological contradiction, it reflects a clear hierarchy of priorities. By aligning itself with Bolton's position, Algeria shows that it is willing to sideline its historic commitments whenever the chance to undermine Morocco presents itself. The Palestinian cause, often waved at Pan-African, Arab, or Non-Aligned summits, becomes secondary to Algeria's fixation on the Sahara. It's a logic reminiscent of temporary alliances in conflict zones, where sworn enemies unite against a shared foe. But here, it's not a desperate wartime pact, it's a calculated diplomatic move. Algeria, which presents itself as a champion of anti-imperialist solidarity, is symbolically aligning with an ideologue whose worldview is the very antithesis of its stated doctrine. And it's not even doing so in the name of national security, but to prop up a separatist movement that has been steadily losing international traction. Worse still, Bolton is calling on Algeria to make financial concessions to benefit Trump and American corporations. Realpolitik or Rank Inconsistency? Some analysts, like those quoted by El Independiente, frame this as realpolitik, a pragmatic strategy where ideology takes a back seat to national interest. Fair enough. But that framing doesn't erase the glaring contradiction of a regime that claims to be a fortress of Palestinian solidarity while publicly legitimizing one of the most outspoken proponents of American Zionism. Algeria, which regularly condemns Morocco's normalization with Israel, now finds itself echoing figures who helped craft that very normalization across the Arab world. This strange convergence feels less like a calculated strategy and more like a revealing slip. The Algerian regime appears increasingly willing to set aside all its red lines, including its foundational anti-Zionism and anti-colonialism, for the sake of opposing Morocco. And perhaps that's the real takeaway from this episode: in certain diplomatic battles, the masks eventually fall. Algeria's support for the Polisario seems, now more than ever, less about the principle of self-determination and more about a deeply entrenched hostility toward Morocco.


Morocco World
9 hours ago
- Morocco World
Trump Alleges Gaza Ceasefire Talks with Netanyhu are Moving in ‘Very Good' Direction
Rabat – US President Donald Trump hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday evening, urging him to end the genocidal war on Gaza. The meeting came as a glimmer of renewed hope for a ceasefire rise following a recent truce between Israel and Iran. Trump told reporters that peace talks are allegedly moving in a 'very good' direction and expressed confidence that Hamas is ready to accept a 60-day ceasefire deal. 'They want to meet and they want to have that ceasefire,' he said. Indirect negotiations between Hamas and Israel resumed in Qatar on Sunday. A Palestinian official told AFP that Monday's talks ended without a breakthrough, but discussions are expected to continue this week. Additionally, Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, is expected to travel to Doha to help push the ceasefire deal forward. AFP quoted two Palestinian sources close to the talks as saying that the US-backed proposal includes a 60-day truce, as well as a prisoner exchange with the release of 10 Israeli hostages and several bodies held by Hamas for an unspecified number of Palestinian prisoners by Israel. Also listed are Hamas' conditions for Israel's gradual withdrawal from Gaza, guarantees to avoid renewed fighting, and the return of the UN-led aid distribution system. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said ending the 'war' and bringing home the hostages are Trump's top priorities in the region. Netanyahu says no to a full Palestinian state During the dinner at the White House, Netanyahu said Israel would always keep security control over Gaza and ruled out creating a full Palestinian state. 'People will say it's not a complete state, it's not a state. We don't care,' he said. Despite the ongoing talks, violence on the ground has not stopped, and Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) continue their relentless attacks on civilians. On Monday, at least 12 people were killed in Gaza by the IOF, including six people inside a clinic sheltering displaced families, according to Gaza's civil defense agency. In addition, Israel has targeted hundreds of civilians seeking aid at US-backed aid distribution points. As Trump and Netanyahu met in Washington, several dozen American protesters gathered near the White House, chanting against US complicity in Israel's genocide on Gaza and accusnig Netanyahu of war crimes. Tags: ceasefireGazaIsraelUS


Ya Biladi
a day ago
- Ya Biladi
Morocco : A parallel event at the World Sociology Forum dedicated to Palestine
The day after the opening of the Fifth World Forum of Sociology, held from July 6 to 11, 2025, in Rabat under the theme «Understanding Justice in the Age of the Anthropocene», the BDS Morocco movement and the National Federation of Education (FNE) are organizing an academic session dedicated to Palestine. Scheduled for Monday, July 7, at 7:30 PM at the union's headquarters, the event aims to express solidarity with the Palestinian people and to reject all forms of academic normalization with Israel. Held under the theme «No Justice, No Love: Gaza at the Limits of the Anthropocene», the session will feature contributions from researchers Kawtar Najib (University of Liverpool – UK), Franca Marquardt (École Normale Supérieure, Florence – Italy/Germany), Ajma Hussain (University of Warwick – UK), Lujain Beruwien (University of Edinburgh – UK), and Fahid Qurashi (University of Salford – UK). This show of solidarity takes place in a context where the Moroccan Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (MACBI) has urged the International Sociological Association (ISA) to reconsider its Forum program, which includes participants directly or indirectly affiliated with Israeli universities. One session in particular has drawn criticism for referring to the Palestinian Islamic Resistance Movement, Hamas, as a «terrorist» organization. When questioned by MACBI, the ISA responded by citing «academic freedom» as its rationale.