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France comes to the aid of its Moroccan reserve after the rope around the neck
France comes to the aid of its Moroccan reserve after the rope around the neck

El Chorouk

time18-02-2025

  • Politics
  • El Chorouk

France comes to the aid of its Moroccan reserve after the rope around the neck

As the Moroccan regime sinks deeper into the mud, France has emerged as the savior of its protectorate, which still maintains a statue of its founder, Marshal Hubert Lyautey, in its largest city, Casablanca. This is the truth that has unmasked Paris, which is now lamenting the loss of its relations with the largest country on the African continent, Algeria. The visit to Western Sahara by French Culture Minister Rachida Dati comes just two days after the Moroccan regime suffered a resounding diplomatic defeat at the African Union, when its candidate, Latifa Akherbash, lost the election for the vice presidency of the African Union Commission to her Algerian counterpart, Ms. Selma Malika Haddadi, a defeat that exposed the weight of the Alaouite regime on the African continent. Since its return to the African Union in 2017, 33 years after leaving the Organization of African Unity (OAU) following the latter's acceptance of Western Sahara's full membership in this continental body, the Alaouite regime has been spreading false claims that it would expel the Sahrawi Republic from the African Union, but the truth was revealed last Saturday when its candidate lost to her Algerian counterpart in a heated race that extended for seven rounds, all of which were lost by the Moroccan candidate. This shock revealed to the Moroccan people, who had lived through eight years of systematic disinformation, that what was propagated by the media circulating around the Alawite palace, as well as some foreign paid platforms, was nothing but black propaganda when push came to shove, which created a shock in the vortex of the Moroccan regime, which reverberated to Paris. The repercussions spread to Paris, which rushed to the aid of its protectorate, fearing the collapse of the monarchy and the regime, which could create a new regime similar to what is happening in the Sahel countries (Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, Chad and Central Africa) and in West Africa (Senegal and Guinea, with more to come). This is why Macron quickly dispatched the Minister of Culture, Rachida Dhi, to Rabat and from there to the occupied Western Sahara in order to calm the palace, assure it of protection, and at the same time mislead Moroccan public opinion, which is fed up with the lies of the Alawite regime, which has long worked to delude the Moroccan people that the Saharawi issue has been resolved. Paris acts from the position of fearing the collapse of the monarchy in the Kingdom of Morocco, so whenever it receives a shock, it rushes to take steps and initiatives to protect it, fearing a popular revolt against the palace. Last October, after the Alaouite regime received a severe blow from the European Court of Justice, which upheld a court ruling that Rabat had appealed, which ruled that the Alaouite kingdom has no sovereignty over the Saharan territories, and consequently canceled the fishing and agriculture agreement with the European Union, because Morocco manipulated the identity of exports originating from Western Sahara, presenting them as Moroccan. While the Moroccan regime was going through one of its darkest periods because of the ECJ's decision, French President Emmanuel Macron gathered his strength and traveled to his protectorate in Rabat, and from the podium of the Moroccan parliament, he defied the ECJ's decision, which was issued only two weeks ago, to give what he does not have to what he does not deserve, flouting international law and UN resolutions, speaking of the Moroccan regime's alleged sovereignty over the Saharawi territories. President Abdelmadjid Tebboune confirmed in his recent interview with L'OPINION that the so-called 'autonomy plan' put forward by the Moroccan regime is in fact a French project, which was pushed during the era of former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who was convicted in many corruption cases. The French army has participated in battles with the Moroccan army against Sahrawi fighters, on more than one occasion, when it realized that the Moroccan army is unable to confront the Sahrawis.

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