
Western Sahara: Bolton Continues to Lead Anti-Morocco Crusade
Rabat – John Bolton, who Trump fired from his position as national security adviser in 2019, is keeping up his Morocco-bashing campaign in favor of Algerian-backed claims challenging Moroccan sovereignty over its southern provinces in Western Sahara.
In a new opinion piece published in the Washington Times, Bolton urged the US to support the outdated referendum claims promoted by the Algerian regime. Bolton's latest plea is bound to fall on unreceptive ears
For decades, Algeria's regime has been using the Polisario Front – a separatist group harbored in the Tindouf camps on Algerian soil – to advance its interests against Morocco by supporting referendum and self-determination claims.
Ignoring Algeria's involvement in interference in the domestic affairs of other countries in the Sahel region, Bolton blamed Morocco's strong ties with the West as the reason that 'worked to the Sahrawis' detriment.'
But he claimed that the situation is changing, suggesting that Algeria is seeking new alliances and the first-ever US-Algeria military cooperation agreement that the North African country signed at the start of the second Trump administration.
This 'signals a new direction,' he claimed.
To the dismay of Polisario supporters, however, recent developments suggest that their continued agitation for separatism in southern Morocco are bound to fall on unreceptive ears.
In the past few weeks, many comments and moves by various US officials have given renewed vigor to Washington's support for Morocco's sovereignty over its southern provinces.
Indeed, with the first Trump administration being the instigator of Washington's unambiguous embrace of Morocco's territorial integrity in December 2020, the incumbent Trump administration has in recent statements signaled its unwavering commitment to upholding Western Sahara and that came months after Trump assumed his office as the US President of the United States for the second time in the country's history.
In April, the US sent a direct setback to Algeria's regime, stressing that its decision of December 2020 remains unchanged and recognizing Morocco's full sovereignty over its southern provinces.
The State Department issued a similar statement following a meeting between Marco Rubio and his Moroccan counterpart . In it, the seat of American diplomacy made sure to remind Algeria and its advocates that Washington supports Morocco's Autonomy Plan as the only feasible political solution to end the Western Sahara dispute.
All of this comes as the Moroccan autonomy initiative continues to gather steam and build unprecedented momentum.
Over 113 countries, including once staunch supporters of the Polisario, have over the past decade joined the growing list of nations that see the autonomy plan as the only viable path to a lasting and realistic political solution to the Sahara dispute. Reality does not matter
Yet this blindingly obvious reality does not appear to discourage Bolton from continuing his support for the lost, sidelined cause of Sahrawi separatism in southern Morocco. His latest anti-Moroccan tirade dismissed Morocco's growing momentum and turned a deaf ear on Polisario's alarming use of terrorist threats to give renewed urgency and relevance to its waning cause.
Many observers have decried Polisario's recent terrorist attacks in southern Morocco, yet Bolton dismissed these condemnations as a 'new line of propaganda' against Sahrawi emancipation.
'The Polisario's opponents are trying a new line of propaganda, alleging without evidence that the Polisario has come under Iran's influence. This misinformation may well be intended to divert U.S. attention from Morocco's decades-long stonewalling against a referendum,' he claimed.
Bolton's dismissive claims come in defiance of many reports, including some that have quoted high-level US and regional officials as confirming that there has been collusion between Polisario (in support of the Algerian regime's agenda in the Maghreb) and Hezbollah, the notorious Iranian proxy.
In April, the Washington Post quoted sources as confirming that Hezbollah had been trainingPolisario operatives on Syrian soil, with the blessing of Iran and the fallen al-Assad regime in Syria.
'Over the years, Iran has fostered a wide array of proxy groups to advance its interests,' the report said, quoting a regional official and a third European official who said Iran trained fighters from the 'Algeria-based Polisario Front' that are now detained by Syria's new security forces.
Such reports have resurfaced on many occasions in recent weeks and months, alerting the international community about Algeria's interference in the domestic affairs of several countries.
'Over the years, Iran has fostered a wide array of proxy groups to advance its interests,' the Post report went on to stress, quoting a regional official and a third European official as indicating that Iran had trained fighters from the 'Algeria-based Polisario Front' that are now detained by Syria's new security forces.
Read also: US Senator James Inhofe, Western Sahara, and 'Alternative Facts'
Meanwhile, Algeria's interference in its neighbors' internal affairs is now known to have not been limited to Morocco. Mali and its Sahel allies, Niger and Burkina Faso, have recently slammed Algeria's hegemonic ambitions in the Sahel. They accused the Algerian army of shooting down a surveillance drone near the border with Mali, lamenting that this was not an isolated incident as Algeria had long interfered in Malian internal affairs.
Yet none of this was enough to convince Bolton of the veracity of Morocco's warnings against the security threats that Polisario and its Algerian sponsors represent not only for Morocco, but for the entire Sahelo-Saharan corridor.
Like most hardened ideologues, Bolton prefers his tainted vision to the reality under his nose. Despite mounting evidence of Polisario's cancerous impact on regional security and stability, he remains convinced that the terror-linked militia is a peace-loving group seeking decolonization.
The mountain of reports about Polisario's atrocities; the well-documented links between Polisario and terrorist groups in the Sahel; the tortured voices of oppressed locals denouncing Polisario and calling for a political solution to end their families' decades-spanning tragedy, the pile of UN reports acknowledging the impossibility of a referendum-based solution — none of this seems to matter to Bolton. And what's more, arguing that Western Sahara 'should return to its 1991 origins,' Bolton is implicitly suggesting that his truth is what matters to him, not the tragic reality on the ground. Tags: Algeria and John Boltonjohn Bolton and algeria
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Morocco World
3 hours ago
- Morocco World
Report: China, Russia Likely to Recognize Moroccan Sovereignty Over Western Sahara
Marrakech – A recent report by the Migration Research Institute identifies Morocco as 'the most stable country in the entire Maghreb' and indicates major diplomatic developments may soon reshape the Western Sahara dispute. Despite persistent high-level tensions with neighboring Algeria, Morocco maintains 'almost unconditional U.S. support,' according to the 'Morocco at Crossroads' report released on June 24. The analysis states that 'the coming months' could see both China and Russia 'approve Moroccan advance in the so-called 'Moroccan Sahara'' at the UN Security Council, following similar positions already adopted by the United States, France, and the UK. The report notes that since the US recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara in 2020, the territory 'has been included in Moroccan territory on U.S. maps.' France followed the US last summer, while the UK made a similar move this month. Among the permanent members of the UN Security Council, 'only China and Russia are missing for the final word.' Growing energy investment hub Strategic investments are propelling Morocco to the forefront of the global energy transition. Possessing 70% of the world's phosphate reserves, the country controls a crucial resource for mid to low-end batteries and 'can oust Indonesia in this sector due to proximity to the EU's market.' In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, China's CNGR Advanced Material announced a $2 billion investment to construct a cathode plant in Morocco aimed at supplying American and European electric battery markets , 'circumventing recent legislative restrictions.' For the director of CNGR Europe, Morocco represents a 'sweet spot' as 'fewer permits are needed to build, and products can be redirected from there to third countries in the event of European and American market closures.' In a parallel development, September 2023 saw LG Chem (South Korea) and Huayou Cobalt (China) announce 'the construction of a lithium cathode and refining plant in Morocco' where 'the competitive environment is similar to the South American quadrant where they aim at the exclusivity of Argentine lithium.' The document explains that CNGR 'invests in synergy with the ruling dynasty and aims to produce 1 million electric vehicles per year spread between Tesla, CATL (Chinese too) and LG Chem.' However, it cautions that 'the activities in connection with China are borderline,' referencing a Chatham House report on Morocco and Tunisia. French backing for Morocco has intensified, with French Trade Minister Franck Riester revealing that 'Proparco, a subsidiary of the French Development Agency, could contribute to the financing of the high-voltage line between Dakhla, the largest centre in Western Sahara, and Casablanca, as well as the construction of the Morocco-Europe pipeline.' The report discusses 'the rapprochement with France due to the trip of the foreign minister Le Maire in April 2024,' as well as cultural exchanges at the Book Fair of Rabat, which the report describes as 'anticipated in Paris by the French counterpart just one month ago.' It characterizes these interactions as 'Time for shaking hands, books and diplomatic intelligence, literally in the etymological sense of 'intus legere' or 'read inside'.' Expanding and legitimate influence Morocco's economic strengths extend beyond energy. The analysis points out that alongside 'Chinese electronic batteries and the integration of Moroccan manufacture with the EU system,' other established sectors with expansion potential include 'banks, pharmaceutical industries, fertilizer and agricultural products sectors' oriented toward Sub-Saharan Africa. The Moroccan banking sector, reformed in the 1990s, is now 'increasingly professional and transparent' with three banks ranking among Africa's top ten, controlling over $90 billion in assets and operating across 22 African countries. The report addresses water resources as another area of contention, stating that 'Morocco is going to build new big dams near the southern border with Algeria, in this way putting at risk the existence of Bechar, a big university city that also hosts an important military commando.' On regional security challenges, the document observes that most migrants entering Europe come from Africa rather than Eastern Europe. It questions how the EU plans 'to deal with a wave of migrants aged between 15 and 30 (the 'fighting age')' who are 'sometimes indoctrinated by Islamic extremist ideologues while crossing deserts.' The analysis proposes that Sufi orders could play a constructive role, describing them as entities 'with which someone will have to conduct a dialogue' to counter extremist messages. It advocates for establishing 'a cultural, even philosophical dialogue to get to know better each other's positions' as a foundation for improved mutual understanding. The document examines Turkiye's growing military presence in the region, which it describes as 'impressive for both Moroccan and European observers,' particularly in the Sahel region covering countries like Mali, Mauritania, and Chad. The report concludes by examining Morocco's delicate position between competing global powers. It reveals that China invested MAD 26 billion ($2.6 billion) in the port of Tanger Med II, which entered service in 2019. However, it raises questions about how Morocco will defend itself in the upcoming trade conflict between the US and China while managing its ongoing tensions with Algeria. As international recognition of Morocco's position on Western Sahara grows, the country appears positioned to strengthen its regional influence, balancing relationships with global powers while navigating the complex geopolitical landscape of North Africa. Tags: ChinaRussiaWestern sahara


Morocco World
4 hours ago
- Morocco World
Algeria Seeks 7-Year Prison Term for Historian Over Anti-Amazigh Comments
Marrakech – Algerian prosecutors have demanded a seven-year prison sentence for historian Mohamed Amine Belghit over controversial comments about Amazigh identity. The case has reignited tensions between Algeria and the United Arab Emirates, with Algeria's state media launching harsh criticism against the Gulf country. According to Algerian media, the prosecutor at the Dar El Beida tribunal near Algiers also requested a fine of 700,000 dinars (approximately €4,600) for Belghit. The verdict will be announced on July 3, as confirmed by defense attorney Toufik Hichour on Facebook. Belghit was placed in detention on May 3 after an interview with UAE-based Sky News Arabia went viral on social media. During the interview, the university professor claimed 'the Amazigh language is an ideological project of Franco-Zionist creation' and declared 'there is no Amazigh culture.' These statements provoked widespread indignation in Algeria, where the Tamazight language was recognized as official in 2016, and 'Yennayer,' the Amazigh New Year, became a national holiday in 2017. The historian faces serious charges including 'crime against national unity,' 'attacking symbols of the nation and republic,' and 'spreading hate speech and discrimination.' His comments were deemed particularly inflammatory given Algeria's constitutional recognition of Amazigh identity alongside Islam and Arabism. Simmering tensions The controversy quickly escalated into a diplomatic incident between Algeria and the UAE. Algeria's state television broadcast a scathing critique of the Emirates on May 2, accusing them of spreading 'a new form of venom, indecency and insults against Algerians' and having 'crossed all red lines.' The five-minute tirade used particularly harsh language, repeatedly referring to the UAE as an 'artificial statelet' and its leaders as 'dwarves.' The broadcast warned that 'media incitement affecting Algerian identity will not pass without moral and popular accountability' and threatened to 'return the insult a hundredfold.' This is not the first diplomatic confrontation between the two countries. Tensions boiled over last year when Algeria accused Abu Dhabi of collaborating with Morocco and Israel to destabilize the Sahel region and undermine Algerian interests in Western Sahara. Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune previously authorized Louisa Hanoune, leader of the Workers' Party, to publicly accuse the UAE of attempting to infiltrate Algeria's institutions and 'pushing for war in the region' to benefit Israel. Hanoune claimed the Emirates were 'collecting money to arm Morocco' and using investments in Algeria as cover for alleged conspiracies. She suggested nationalizing Emirati-owned companies in Algeria, including the National Company of Tobacco and Matches, to reduce the UAE's economic presence in the country. Although Amazigh activists denounced the comments as hateful, some have criticized the Algerian government's response as an attempt to deflect internal tensions by focusing on external enemies. One Kabyle activist noted on social media: 'It's not Sky News Arabia denying our history, it's the Algerian state giving voice to those who falsify our origins.' The case draws parallels to that of Franco-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal, who was sentenced to five years in prison in March for stating in a French media outlet that Algeria had inherited territories from Morocco during French colonization. Tags: Algeriaalgeria and uae


Morocco World
6 hours ago
- Morocco World
EU Says It Again: Neither EU Nor Members Recognize Self-styled SADR
Marrakech – The European Union spokesperson for Foreign Affairs crushed separatist ambitions Friday, firmly declaring that 'neither the EU nor any of its Member States recognize the SADR.' This decisive statement shattered Polisario's attempts to exploit their marginal presence at the EU-AU ministerial meeting in Rome on June 27, where the fictional entity desperately sought international validation. The EU spokesperson meticulously dismantled any misconceptions by attributing the paper state's presence exclusively to African Union invitation procedures, asserting that 'invitations to African members are sent by the African Union.' He stressed that the EU's position remains unaltered despite the separatist group's attendance. 'The modalities agreed upon provide that each party is responsible for inviting its own members,' the spokesperson articulated, effectively severing any connection between EU policies and the illusory republic's participation. This latest rejection mirrors the humiliating scenario that unfolded last May during the AU-EU Ministerial Meeting in Brussels, where Polisario representatives encountered complete isolation and irrelevance despite maneuvering to attend under the African Union's umbrella. Just days before that Brussels meeting, the EU had already delivered an uncompromising repudiation of the phantom entity, with the bloc's spokesperson for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy bluntly declaring that 'neither the EU nor any of its Member States recognize the SADR.' The spokesperson had emphatically hammered home that 'the position of the EU is well known' and that the illusory entity's presence 'at the EU-AU ministerial meeting has no influence whatsoever on this position,' representing a devastating diplomatic setback for the separatist agenda. Then, in Brussels, the separatist group's diplomatic insignificance crystallized when they received merely a hastily scribbled 'SADR' label on a plain sheet of paper, while legitimate African states enjoyed full protocol honors and recognition. During the meeting, the EU's High Representative deliberately vacated the room during the brief moments when a Polisario representative attempted to address the assembly, delivering an unmistakable message of rejection and further exposing the group's political invisibility. These mounting diplomatic failures for the Algerian-fabricated entity coincide with a seismic shift in international positions regarding the Western Sahara dispute. In July 2024, the African Union Executive Council demolished the separatist narrative with a resounding verdict—52 out of 54 nations voting to exclude the pseudo-state from the pan-African body's engagements with international partners. This overwhelming decision provoked Algerian Foreign Minister Ahmed Attaf to erupt with claims that certain parties sought to 'institutionalize a policy of exclusion' against what he desperately characterized as 'a founding member of our organization.' Political analyst Oualid Kebir decoded this reaction as betraying a 'deep sense of pain and an explicit acknowledgment of the resounding diplomatic defeat' absorbed by Algeria, which had previously manipulated the fictional entity into positions within African institutions. The international community increasingly gravitates toward Morocco's 2007 Autonomy Plan as the definitive solution, supported by nearly two decades of UN resolutions endorsing this approach as the optimal route to a politically viable settlement. The momentum behind Morocco's territorial integrity continues to accelerate, with the United Kingdom recently joining the expanding coalition of 120 countries backing Morocco's plan—signaling the irreversible collapse of the separatist illusion. The fictitious 'SADR' entity, a destabilizing relic that only exists in Tindouf camps, remains propped up by Algeria while the actual territory thrives under Morocco's rightful and legitimate control. In another crippling blow to the Polisario's secessionist agenda, US Congressman Joe Wilson, alongside Democratic Representative Jimmy Panetta, has submitted a bipartisan bill seeking to classify the Polisario Front as a foreign terrorist organization, potentially subjecting it to stringent sanctions and complete diplomatic isolation. Just hours after this legislative push, the front delivered a confirmatory nudge to show its terror intentions by launching projectiles near the southern Moroccan city of Es-Smara, causing panic among civilians and prompting a MINURSO field investigation of what local Sahrawi NGOs condemned as a 'hostile act' violating international law. As Morocco approaches the 50th anniversary of the Green March on November 6, Morocco's Permanent Representative to the UN, Omar Hilale, has previously voiced optimism that this manufactured regional dispute approaches definitive resolution, potentially extinguishing Algeria's fabricated conflict and its invented proxy state. The latest EU pronouncement confirms the paper republic's deepening isolation, as the separatist agenda increasingly fades into irrelevance across international forums despite desperate maneuvers to sustain an illusion of legitimacy. Tags: European UnionSelf-proclaimed SADRWestern sahara