Jump to navigation

Morocco

Washington backs Rabat on Western Sahara, setting up clash with UN mission on territory’s sovereignty

King Mohammed VI secures US backing as risks mount of clashes with Polisario and Algeria

United States President Donald Trump’s administration has renewed its support for Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara at a meeting in Washington with Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio referred to Morocco's ‘Autonomy Proposal as the only framework’ as he urged the parties  to ‘negotiate a mutually acceptable solution.’

During his first term as president in 2019, Trump broke with decades of US neutrality on Western Sahara by recognising Moroccan sovereignty in exchange for Rabat restoring diplomatic ties with Israel (AC Vol 61 No 25, King reaps Saharan dividend).

That marked a major shift in diplomatic positions on Western Sahara’s status. Last July, French President Emmanuel Macron also recognised Moroccan sovereignty, following a similar move by the Spanish government in 2022 (AC Vol 65 No 16, Emmanuel ​ Macron’s Saharan mystery).

Though Trump’s continued support for Morocco’s position is not a surprise, the meeting in Washington still represents something of a coup for Bourita, entrenching the sense that Rabat, along with Egypt, is likely to be Trump’s closest ally in North Africa.

Rubio’s offer to facilitate talks with Morocco and Algeria on Western Sahara’s future also hints at a US move to push for the end of the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO). At a meeting on 11 April with Staffan de Mistura, the UN Secretary-General’s Personal Envoy for Western Sahara, senior State Department official Lisa Kenna said that ‘genuine autonomy under Moroccan sovereignty’ was ‘only feasible solution’ for the Western Sahara. She called on all parties to come to the table to negotiate a ‘mutually acceptable result.’



Related Articles

King reaps Saharan dividend

Rabat has secured a big diplomatic win by restoring relations with Israel, but also faces new risks

This summer, King Mohammed VI (M6) told United States presidential son-in-law and Middle East envoy Jared Kushner that Morocco would need a very big reward for restoring diplomatic...


Emmanuel Macron’s Saharan mystery

The recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed region comes after personal intervention by the French President

The interim French government’s decision on 29 July to in effect recognise Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed Western Sahara is another victory for Rabat – following a similar...


Grand ambitions, little money

After the summits in Brussels and Washington, their big promises will be tested on debt, trade and investment this year

For many of the delegates who travelled to Washington DC for the United States-African leaders' summit on 13-15 December, the first such gathering in eight years, it was...


Washington Who's Who

The capital's Africanists are divided over new policies and their authors

Few are indifferent about Washington’s Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Susan Rice, who inspires critics and loyalists in almost equal measure. The press oscillates from adulation...


US military calls up Europe

Washington wants the European Union to work with its African military missions, which may be more complicated than it seems

The United States Africa Command (Africom) wants help with its task of promoting stability and fighting terrorism on the continent and hopes to get it from the European...