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Morocco World
a day ago
- Politics
- Morocco World
Analysis: For Algeria, Polisario is an Ally, MAK is a Threat
Doha – Algeria's military regime is waging a calculated geopolitical charade in North Africa, fueling instability abroad while silencing resistance at home. Under President Abdelmadjid Tebboune and military chief Saïd Chengriha, the Algerian state has morphed into a launchpad for armed separatist agendas, even as it violently represses peaceful calls for autonomy within its own borders. This glaring contradiction lays bare a regime built not on principles of self-determination, but on selective oppression, weaponized hypocrisy, and a desperate bid to maintain regional influence at any cost. According to an analysis by Sahel Intelligence, 'this paradox is flagrant. Algeria, which qualifies the MAK as a 'terrorist group' without providing concrete evidence of violent acts, simultaneously offers official support to a movement like the Polisario, regularly associated with activities threatening the stability of the region.' The report exposes how Algeria's military leadership has weaponized the concept of self-determination, deploying it selectively to advance regional destabilization while denying the same rights to its own citizens. Algeria's handling of the two movements exposes a glaring double standard—sharp, deliberate, and impossible to miss. The Kabyle independence movement, represented by the Government of Kabylia in exile (GPK) in France, has consistently advocated for peaceful means to achieve self-determination. 'Under Ferhat Mehenni, the Movement for Self-determination of Kabylia (MAK) has always claimed a peaceful, secular and democratic struggle, rejecting any recourse to violence or terrorism,' notes the Sahel Intelligence analysis. 'The MAK denounces a policy of systemic marginalization of Kabylia by the Algerian state, on linguistic, economic, religious and identity levels,' adds the analysis. Meanwhile, Algeria provides comprehensive support to the Polisario Front, which has become 'a hired regional gun that implements Iranian agendas in North Africa.' This goes in line with Algerian objectives in the Western Mediterranean and the Sahel. Algeria's behavior exacerbates tensions and fuels risks of a major regional war that would set back decades of efforts to preserve peace, security, and prosperity in southern Europe and along Africa's Atlantic front. 'Alger furnishes refuge, financing and military as well as diplomatic assistance. Algeria hosts the movement in the Tindouf camps, presents it as a liberation movement, and advocates on its behalf in international forums,' the report states. Polisario's terrorist ties are an open secret The Polisario's terrorist ties are no longer whispers in the dark—they've stepped into the spotlight. Last April, Republican politician John Wilson stressed Washington's 'determination to support the North African kingdom in confronting the threats posed by Polisario Front terrorists' during a meeting with Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita. Multiple intelligence reports have documented the Polisario's connections with terrorist organizations. The Sahel Intelligence analysis points to 'connections with Hamas and Iran, via weapons and training networks, complicity with AQMI (Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb) and other jihadist groups operating in the Sahel, facilitating arms trafficking and kidnappings.' These elements have led several observers and states to characterize 'the instrumentalization of the Tindouf camps by the chief of staff General Saïd Chengriha, President Abdelmadjid Tebboune and his advisers, for opaque paramilitary activities, far from the standards of international conventions on refugees.' The situation in the Tindouf camps has deteriorated significantly. Recent protests erupted following what the Sahrawi Association for the Defence of Human Rights (ASADEDH) described as a 'horrific massacre' committed by the Algerian army in the Arkoub district of the Dakhla camp. The incident resulted in two deaths and nine injuries, with three victims in critical condition. NGOs strongly condemned the Algerian army's actions, pointing out that Polisario militias not only failed to denounce the attack but actively aided in suppressing protesters demanding justice for the victims. The growing discontent within the Tindouf camps has ignited an unprecedented wave of dissent, with frustrated Sahrawis openly demanding an end to decades of exploitation and false promises. According to local sources, chants once unthinkable in Polisario-controlled zones are now echoing through the camps. As they muster the courage to oppose the separatist group's illusive agenda, this emerging cohort of Sahrawi dissidents is calling not just for relief from their prolonged suffering, but for the immediate acceptance of Morocco's autonomy initiative as the only viable path forward. The total collapse of Polisario's Algeria-sponsored separatism is increasingly within reach The United Kingdom's recent alignment with Morocco on the Western Sahara marks a profound geopolitical shift. Not only does this shift consolidate the position of the world's major powers – including the US, France, and Spain – in favor of Morocco's territorial integrity, but also signals the collapse of the post-colonial ambivalence that long enabled Algerian-sponsored separatism to persist. That even former colonial actors now endorse Morocco's autonomy initiative reflects a recalibration of global realpolitik: sovereignty, territorial integrity, and strategic partnership now outweigh outdated fantasies of Balkanizing North Africa. If regional tensions continue to escalate and mounting intelligence confirms links between Polisario members and activities that undermine regional security, the path toward designating the group as a terrorist organization in the medium term will become significantly clearer—and more politically inevitable. While the Polisario has not completely disappeared, it is weakened politically, diplomatically and militarily. The balance of power clearly favors Morocco, which is advancing its autonomy initiative, regional development plans, and garnering increasing international support. If the current trend continues, particularly if the US administration designates the Polisario as a terrorist organization, Algeria may find itself forced to reconsider its support for the separatist group to avoid incurring the wrath of America and the Western world. Read also: Hilale Slams Algeria's Regime Over Regional Destabilization, Hypocrisy, and Separatism


Ya Biladi
23-05-2025
- Sport
- Ya Biladi
Algerian army holds drills near border as Morocco hosts African Lion military exercises
While Morocco hosts the «African Lion» military exercises, jointly organized by the Royal Armed Forces and their American counterparts, the Chief of Staff of the Algerian Army, Lieutenant General Saïd Chengriha, oversaw live-fire drills in the third military region, near the Moroccan border. According to Algerian media, the exercise—dubbed «Fortress 2025»—involved units from the operational sector south of Tindouf, supported by various formations and military branches, as part of the 2024–2025 combat readiness program. Last year, Chengriha also supervised live-fire exercises in the same region, three weeks before the «African Lion» maneuvers, which ran from May 20 to 31. In 2023, he oversaw similar drills in the third military region, this time two weeks before the start of the joint Moroccan-American exercises.


El Chorouk
07-05-2025
- Politics
- El Chorouk
Chengriha: Algeria Doesn't Accept Being Accused, Challenged in Counter-terrorism
Algeria will not accept anyone to outbid it in its counter-terrorism experience, within the framework of the laws of the Republic, the Minister Delegate to the Minister of National Defence, Chief of Staff of the People's National Army, Gen. Saïd Chengriha said during his supervision, on Wednesday in Algiers, of the opening of an international forum entitled 'The Geopolitics of Terrorism in Light of New Global Transformations,' according to a statement from the Ministry of National Defence. Chnegriha added that 'Algeria has suffered from the scourge of terrorism before anyone else, and it is Algeria that declared war on it, at a time when doubt, hesitation, and complicity filled many political, media, regional, and international scenes.' He explained that Algeria 'was among the first countries to recognise the danger of terrorism, and thanks to the people's solidarity with its state institutions, it was able to eradicate it and thwart its malicious plans.' 'It is worth recalling that Algeria realised early on the danger of barbaric terrorism and obscurantist extremism, which threatened the pillars of the nation and state and its republican system. Algeria is better able to understand this alien threat, given its suffering from its woes. Thanks to the people's adherence to their homeland and their support for its institutions, foremost among them the People's National Army, it was able to thwart these malicious plots that targeted the state, the unity of society, and its eternal identity.' He also noted that Algeria, 'with its people, army, and institutions, has triumphed over the scourge of terrorism, developing a unique experience in combating and preventing it, both operationally and through adopting a comprehensive, multidimensional approach. This has become a model to be emulated in confronting this scourge and a compass to guide countries and societies in protecting them from this cross-border and transcontinental threat.'