31-07-2025
Polisario Misinterprets King's Speech: Olive Branch Extended to Algeria, Not Puppet Separatists
Marrakech – In the heart of the savannah, a lion let out a commanding roar – an unmistakable signal meant for the other great beasts of the land. It was a roar that marked territory, invited challenge, or extended truce.
But from the edge of the clearing, a jackal stepped forward and began barking loudly, as if the message had been meant for him. The animals looked on – not in fear, but in amused silence. The lion hadn't even looked his way. Still, the jackal kept barking, mistaking attention for authority, and noise for relevance.
The Polisario Front has done much the same. It has spectacularly misread King Mohammed VI's recent diplomatic overture – responding like a side actor barging onto center stage during a scene never meant for them.
Once again, the group exposes its detachment from geopolitical reality, mistaking a gesture toward sovereign decision-makers in Algiers for an invitation addressed to a manufactured proxy.
The separatist militia rushed to declare itself 'ready for dialogue' with Morocco following the King's Throne Day speech – an opportunistic misinterpretation that lays bare the group's desperation to insert itself into a conversation where it was neither addressed nor acknowledged.
Through its so-called 'Ministry of Information,' the Tindouf-based phantom entity asserted that 'the exercise of the right to self-determination represents the just and consensual solution to resolve the conflict in Western Sahara.'
This willful distortion of the King's words demonstrates the militia's increasingly desperate position as international support for its separatist agenda crumbles, alongside its futile attempt to claim relevance on the international stage.
If anything, this response proves that the movement remains trapped in a Cold War-era mindset – clinging to outdated rhetoric and zero-sum ideologies that no longer resonate in today's multipolar world.
The Polisario statement seized on the monarch's reference to seeking a 'consensual solution' regarding the Sahara dispute – a solution 'without victories or defeats' that would 'save face for all parties.' But the militia's leadership conveniently ignored the unmistakable target of the royal message: Algeria, the puppet master pulling Polisario's strings for over five decades.
Algeria offered choice between dignity or downfall
King Mohammed VI's message shattered any ambiguity about its intended recipient. The monarch directly addressed 'brothers in Algeria,' calling for 'frank, responsible, fraternal and sincere dialogue on the various issues pending between the two countries.' The message was clear: dialogue is possible, but only with those who hold the reins, not those who dance to their tune.
His language left no room for misinterpretation: 'My firm commitment to reaching out to our brothers in Algeria stems from a belief in the unity of our peoples and in our ability to overcome, together, this unfortunate situation.'
The pivotal passage that crystallizes this structural shift in Morocco's diplomatic discourse came when the sovereign declared: 'As proud as we are of these positions… we affirm our commitment to finding a consensual solution, with no winner or loser, that preserves the dignity of all parties.'
This statement bristles with diplomatic precision. The formula 'no winner or loser' does not signal neutrality but constitutes a calculated offer for Algeria to exit the crisis on Moroccan terms while saving face. The exchange offered is not material but symbolic – a truce proposal to a diplomatically besieged adversary without humiliation.
The King's speech operates within what analysts call 'ethical realism,' where concepts like truth, shared destiny, and dignity function not as abstract values but as instruments of soft power that force the opposing party to either engage or expose their intransigence.
King Mohammed VI's Throne Day speech dispatches a clear message without naming his adversary: Morocco stands open, steadfast, enjoying growing international support, and time favors those who recognize this reality.
A hand extended
His assertions carry a dual weight. On the surface, it radiates brotherhood and reconciliation; yet, in essence, it is a sophisticated form of political pressure that places the Algerian regime under scrutiny both at home and abroad.
It is not merely a call but a sovereign stance: Morocco takes the initiative, speaks from a position of legitimacy, and appeals to the logic of history and shared destiny, while the other side sinks further into isolation and forfeited opportunities.
This 'extended hand' is not a naïve plea for superficial reconciliation, but a strategic instrument to dismantle the barren logic of hostility.
In the language of political strategy, such gestures are not solely directed at the opposing regime – they are messages to the entire world. With this speech, the King cornered the Algerian leadership before the international community: either engage with reason or continue to play the role of a reckless regime.
The paradox is striking: those who believe the speech was only addressed to the Algerian leadership fail to see that this extended hand is, in fact, a decisive blow to their destructive project, a project sustained by escalation and the refusal to assume internal responsibilities.
This speech should not be read superficially; it must be deconstructed as a cold, calculated strategic document – one that exposes the maneuvers of a regime that has lost both moral and historical legitimacy.
Algeria confronted, not with threats – but with triumph
The significance of the King's speech lies not only in its content but also in its timing, as it represents a gesture of conciliation delivered from a place of unmatched diplomatic leverage.
Today's Morocco stands transformed – with Rabat at the center of alliance networks stretching from Washington to Paris and Dakar, backed by substantial African investments and accumulating international recognition for its autonomy initiative.
Over the past decade, Morocco has secured a cascade of diplomatic victories supporting its territorial integrity. The December 2020 US recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over the Sahara triggered a domino effect, with Spain, France, the United Kingdom, and Portugal all endorsing Morocco's Autonomy Plan as the sole viable solution to end the conflict.
Meanwhile, Algerian diplomacy has collapsed into irrelevance. Since Morocco's triumphant return to the African Union, Algeria has watched helplessly as its influence evaporated across the continent. Morocco has systematically demolished Algeria's diplomatic position, building brick upon brick to cement its newfound continental leadership and strategic depth.
This strategic position allows the King to speak with confidence, not as one requesting dialogue but as one extending an offer. The offer itself contains a moral trap: those who reject it appear inflexible, while those who accept implicitly endorse Morocco's vision for resolution.
The King's extended hand to Algeria carries dual significance – it simultaneously addresses the Algerian people while isolating the regime. This deliberate separation between the Algerian state apparatus and its population represents a strategic reframing of bilateral relations, distinguishing between state logic and national identity.
This semiotic contrast reflects Rabat's intention to neutralize official Algerian hostility through discourse that resonates with collective Maghrebi memory – an arena where Morocco holds a clear advantage.
Recent developments have accelerated Algeria's isolation. Ghana – previously among the dwindling list of countries maintaining relations with the self-proclaimed Sahrawi republic – has officially declared its support for the Moroccan Autonomy Plan, labeling it the 'sole realistic' solution for the region. This diplomatic coup followed Kenya's dramatic reversal from staunch Polisario supporter to backer of Morocco's position.
Sixty years wasted – Algeria outplayed, outflanked, outclassed
These shifts represent more than tactical diplomatic maneuvers – they signal the total collapse of Algeria's decades-long strategy. As Algerian political analyst Noureddine Boukrouh brutally acknowledged, Algeria has squandered 'no less than fifty billion dollars over fifty years' on this failed cause. His assessment is devastating: 'In the Western Sahara, Morocco got the prey, while we got the shadow. And the shadow cost us more than the prey.'
Boukrouh tears the mask off Algeria's decades-long obsession with Western Sahara, exposing it for what it really is: a bankrupt regime's last remaining lifeline.
The military junta in Algiers has cynically turned the Sahara issue into its only political currency – weaponizing it to distract a battered population and justify its own grip on power. This isn't diplomacy. This is an outdated, Cold War-era hysteria – one that has now cornered Algeria into historic diplomatic isolation and its most fragile state since independence.
According to political analyst Samir Bennis, the regime's neurotic fixation with blocking Moroccan sovereignty is rooted in three deep-seated paranoias that say more about Algeria than they ever did about Morocco. Reconciliation terrifies them – because without the 'Moroccan threat,' they lose the only manufactured enemy that keeps their people in check.
And for over six decades, Algiers has seen regional politics as a zero-sum battlefield where sabotaging Morocco became an institutional doctrine, not a diplomatic difference.
But the final, most unspoken fear is the one they can't admit publicly: if the Sahara file closes in Morocco's favor – as the entire world is now signaling – then uncomfortable questions will start surfacing about Algeria's own inherited borders and its post-colonial territorial legitimacy. And that, for the regime, is a red line soaked in historical guilt and imperial delusion.
As Morocco's diplomatic momentum becomes unstoppable, Algeria faces its day of reckoning. 'Sixty-three years of independence, and here we are risking losing everything in a case that has been mismanaged from the beginning,' Boukrouh laments.
'We are at the hour of truth, and we will be held accountable for the money spent on this losing cause. Who will cry for us? No one, not even the Palestinians or the Sahrawis. And who in the world will not mock us? No one. On the contrary, everyone will rub their hands in joy.'
The King's gesture of dialogue was never intended for a puppet separatist militia manufactured in Algeria's intelligence offices. It targeted the actual decision-makers in Algiers – the military regime that has cynically exploited the Sahara issue while its own citizens suffer from economic stagnation and political repression.
As Morocco moves decisively toward full sovereignty, the Polisario flails – grasping at misread signals in a desperate bid to stay relevant. Tags: King's Throne Day SpeechPolisario FrontWestern sahara