Étiquette : Spain

  • Daughter of senior intelligence officer worked for Morocco DGED

    Tags : Spain, Morocco, DGED, Bárbara Barón, Ahmed Charai, Enrique García Castaño,

    The daughter of the General Commissioner for Information worked for years in Spain for Moroccan intelligence

    Bárbara Barón was hired by Ahmed Charai, public relations for the foreign secret service, to help her defend Moroccan interests in Spain

    By Ignacio Cembrero | José Bautista

    03/12/2023 – 05:00

    EC EXCLUSIVE

    Bárbara Barón, a journalist, worked for many years for the Moroccan foreign secret service when her father, Enrique Barón, was the General Commissioner of Information of the National Police, a position he held January 2012 to December 2017. Today he is the provincial chief in Malaga in the Police.

    Bárbara Barón’s link with the General Directorate of Studies and Documentation (DGED), Moroccan foreign espionage, was reflected in WhatsApp messages exchanged on September 24, 2017 between Commissioner Enrique García Castaño, then head of the Central Unit of Operational Support of the National Police, and Francisco Martínez, who until November 2016 was Secretary of State for Security. The chats appear in the summary of the so-called Kitchen case.

    Commissioner García Castaño first explained to the former number two of the Ministry of the Interior that the National Intelligence Center (CNI) « has an exclusive department for Morocco. » He then adds: « watch Ahmed Charai, [who] controls the media, comes to Spain a lot, works for Moroccan intelligence (…) ». « You know who he sees, with [Enrique] Barón, with [Samy] Cohen and Barón’s daughter whom he pays to write articles for the Moroccan Observateur, » he concludes. Samy Cohen is a businessman and leader of the Jewish community in Madrid who was investigated last September by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs for having allegedly usurped the role of a diplomat during some of his stays in Morocco, although he does not belong to the body. He did it, according to the Tel Aviv press, with the help of David Govrin, head of the Israeli mission in Rabat. Govrin was sanctioned and removed from his post that same month.

    Cohen told El Confidencial that he « has no relationship with Mr. Charai » and categorically denied having worked for any secret service. Ahmed Charai is the owner of Global Media Holding, a press group that includes the weekly L’Observateur du Maroc, to which García Castaño refers. In the hundreds of cables and emails from Moroccan diplomacy and secret services spread anonymously via Twitter in the fall of 2014, Charai acts as the public relations officer for Morocco’s foreign intelligence agency. The DGED is the only secret service that reports directly to the royal palace. It is directed by Yassin Mansouri who was a schoolmate of King Mohamed VI.

    “The DGED is the only secret service that reports directly to the royal palace. It is directed by Mansouri, who was a schoolmate of the king. ”Bárbara Barón agreed to meet with El Confidencial, but she declined to answer questions about her relationship with the DGED. Ahmed Charai did not reply to the emails or WhatsApp that were sent to him either, and Commissioner Enrique Barón, who was contacted by this newspaper through the National Police Press Office, also remained silent. Charai’s work has focused heavily on journalists and the media. In the fall of 2014, documents surfaced on Twitterin which he consulted the remuneration of journalists with Mourad El Ghoul, chief of staff of the director of the DGED. The recipients of these payments were four well-known French journalists and one American, but all of them denied having received money from L’Observateur du Maroc.

    A judgment of November 4, 2015 of the court of first instance 46 of Madrid further confirms that Charai is a close collaborator of Moroccan intelligence. His press group « belongs in practice to the DGED », affirms the Moroccan journalist Ali Lmrabet, exiled in Barcelona. Contrary to what Commissioner García Castaño stated, Barbara Barón did not publish articles in L’Observateur du Maroc. She did appear on social networks and websites as a correspondent in Spain for that weekly and for Pouvoirs d’Afrique, another publication that belongs to Ahmed Charai. He combined this correspondent, according to her, with the Spanish media in which he was working in those years (La Información, Grupo Merca2, etc.). The journalist prepared for Charai his trips to Spain, especially Madrid, and accompanied him to some of the appointments with politicians.

    Since he set foot on Spanish soil, the Moroccan agent was followed step by step by the CNI, according to sources linked to the Spanish secret service.

    The main public activity of Bárbara Barón was the publication for years of apparently informative articles, in a Madrid newspaper, favorable to the Moroccan authorities and critical of the opposition, as well as the Polisario Front. Charai himself wrote opinion forums in that same newspaper, the last one last January. « International Amnesty and the British intelligence agency MI6: Dangerous partners! », was, for example, the title of a chronicle by Bárbara Barón, published on July 2, 2020, in which she attacked the Moroccan journalist Omar Radi who he is now serving a six-year prison sentence.

    « When the editorial writer Abou Al Riffi corrects Moulay Hicham » was another of the headlines that put an article. Moulay Hicham is the wayward member of the Alawite royal family and the editorial writer he names does not exist. It is a collective pseudonym used by the Moroccan secret services to settle accounts through the press. Several of Barbara Barón’s publications served to praise the King of Morocco, such as the one entitled, on July 31, 2021, « Mohamed VI extends his hand to Algeria and seeks reconciliation. » There was also praise for senior officials, for example, on February 9, 2021, in the following chronicle: « The head of the Moroccan DGST, Abdellatif Hammouchi, receives recognition from the US. » The General Directorate for Territory Supervision (DGST) is the Moroccan secret police.

    The Moroccan official press has frequently echoed the articles by Charai and Barón published in Spain. He stressed that they highlight the country’s progress and shed light on the maneuvers of Morocco’s detractors. The CNI assures, in a confidential report sent to La Moncloa on June 24, 2021, in the midst of the crisis between Spain and Morocco, that the DGED « tries to influence the media to generate a current of opinion favorable to Morocco and discredit to the Polisario Front” that fights for the independence of Western Sahara.

    Bárbara Barón did another favor for Abdellatif Hammouchi because Charai requested it. He sent his collaborator in Madrid, on September 15 at 3:00 p.m., the photo of Hammouchi receiving Esperanza Casteleiro, the new director of the CNI, in Rabat. She asked him to spread it to related Spanish media and she did so immediately, according to eyewitnesses. This is how the news broke that the head of the Spanish spies was in Rabat.

    Casteleiro did not think that the photo taken in Rabat would be distributed and did not want his visit to be made public. Hammouchi, on the other hand, accused of spying on dozens of European politicians and journalists with the malicious program Pegasus, wanted this meeting to be publicized to show that he was still a valid interlocutor for foreign intelligence chiefs. Not only Bárbara Barón spread the photo. Hours later, the official Moroccan press agency MAP did the same, and the Spanish agency EFE took it from there, which also distributed it.

    #image_title

    The CNI points out that this episode caused great discomfort because the meeting was organized in the strictest secrecy when Spain and Morocco had begun to rebuild their relations after more than a year of tension. Casteleiro agreed to be photographed, according to the same sources, because Hammouchi assured him that these images would not be disclosed, but would serve as a mere memory of their meeting.

    Long before beginning to practice journalism, Barbara Barón already made herself known in the press. At the beginning of June 2014, she published a report in the magazine of the Madrid Francisco de Vitoria University where she was studying that degree. In it she recounted in first person how she had participated embedded in an anti-jihadist operation, on the outskirts of Madrid, carried out by the Special Operations Group of the police, as revealed by ElDiario.es. Never, until then, had any journalist enjoyed such a privilege. This royalty was then attributed to her father, who was General Commissioner of Information and, as such, responsible for the fight against terrorism.

    This luck was attributed to her father who was responsible for the fight against terrorism

    Long before publishing his first articles in the Spanish press, Ahmed Charai also made himself known in 2008, in the world of European intelligence, when he carried out a smear operation against former President José María Aznar. He then disclosed through L’Observateur du Maroc the false news that he was the father of the daughter that the French Minister of Justice, Rachida Dati, was expecting. She did not want to reveal who the parent was. To give credence to the « news », the Spanish weekly Interviú then received some anonymous photos in which Aznar and Dati were seen together at the exit of a restaurant in Paris. Charai was sentenced in October 2011, by the Provincial Court of Madrid, for « illegitimate interference in the right to honor » by publishing « untrue information » about the former president.

    Source

    #Spain #Morocco #DGED #Bárbara_Barón #Enrique_García_Castaño #Ahmed_Charai

  • USA and Morocco impose their position on the Sahara to Spain

    USA and Morocco impose their position on the Sahara to Spain

    Tags : USA, Spain, Western Sahara, Morocco, PSOE, Pedro Sanchez,

    Odón Elorza

    The changes in the global scenario, exacerbated by the war in Ukraine and the geopolitical interests of the United States and the European Union , have led Pedro Sánchez and Minister José Manuel Albares to position themselves in favor of a Moroccan proposal for the Sahara. Western that is neither credible nor respects international law.

    This shift, which affects the relationship with Algeria , has been consummated without prior debate or due transparency and against the position adopted by the PSOE in its electoral program and in the Resolutions of its 40th Congress. I did express it in 2022 before the Socialist Group of Congress and in various articles. The collective “Socialists for the Sahara” has also published a successful manifesto.

    The pronouncements of Donald Trump (December 2020) and then Joe Biden in favor of the Moroccan thesis, the support of the monarchies of the Persian Gulf, the maneuvers and blackmail of the Moroccan king -with his Spanish lobby-, the pressure towards Europe from the mafias with illegal emigration trafficking, the influence of China and Russia in Africa and the advance of jihadist terrorism in the Sahel region have forced and narrowed, even more, the discourse and turn of Spain. In this way, the UN resolutions on decolonization and the right to self-determination of the Saharawi People, which have been turned into dead paper for years, are sacrificed.

    A summit accompanied by another contempt from Mohamed VI to Spain, which has not served to guarantee the security and territorial integrity of Ceuta and Melilla or respect for the continental shelf of the Canary Islands



    This definitive change in Spain, after years of lukewarmness, has been evidenced in the last Spanish-Moroccan summit in Rabat, which has included in a joint declaration, full of rhetoric , the weakness of the Spanish position and the concessions of political and economic support to the Moroccan regime. A summit, accompanied by another contempt from Mohamed VI to Spain, which has not served to guarantee the security and territorial integrity of Ceuta and Melilla or respect for the continental shelf of the Canary Islands.

    Morocco’s non-credible offer in favor of a status of real autonomy and freedom for the occupied territories in the former Spanish colony-province of the Sahara, presented at the UN in 2007, has not even materialized. The Polisario Front also presented its plan in April 2007.

    Morocco’s non-credible offer in favor of a status of real autonomy and freedom for the occupied territories has not even materialized



    But let’s go back to the Sahara conflict. Nearly 47 years have passed since the illegal invasion of the territory of Western Sahara by Morocco and the flight of the army of Franco and Juan Carlos I. In that time, there has been no progress in a political solution. On the contrary, they have all been setbacks.

    The humanitarian situation of hardship in the Saharawi refugee camps in Tindouf and the Moroccan repression in the former Sahara worsened, political support and international solidarity for the cause decreased and different events have reinforced the strategic role of Morocco and its role as gendarme from the gate to Europe. The EU pays the bill to Morocco and Spain bows its head.

    In any case, the most recent UN resolution on the problem must be respected , number 2602 of October 29, 2021 , which sets the lines of action. The UN « commits itself to helping to reach a just, lasting and acceptable political solution for both parties, based on compromise, and that provides for the self-determination of the people of Western Sahara within the framework of provisions in accordance with the principles and purposes of the Charter of the United Nations”. The UN stresses the importance of the parties committing to open a dialogue process on the respective proposals through the initiation of talks sponsored by the United Nations.

    The EU pays the bill to Morocco and Spain bows its head

    Spain cannot fail to defend the interests of the Saharawi People. She has that legal and moral obligation . And it must facilitate the resumption of a political process of contacts between Morocco and the Polisario, in preparation for the negotiation phase. The objective is to reach a peace accepted by both parties on the basis of a well-defined proposal and with real guarantees of compliance. But in a planet of serious crises and uncertainties, the Saharawi cause is very small and for many a chimera.

    The proposal for an autonomous status for the territory of the Sahara, like the option of independence, must be discussed and agreed between the parties to, in the end, proceed to a democratic referendum. As the beginning of the dialogue, respect for democratic freedoms and the safeguarding of human rights in the Sahara must be guaranteed.

    For all these reasons, it is of vital importance that Spain exercise its diplomatic responsibility as the former administrator of the territory, grant Spanish nationality to the Sahrawis , increase humanitarian aid to the camps and guarantee the permanence of a MINURSO contingent.

    *Odón Elorza is a former PSOE deputy for Guipúzcoa, former mayor of San Sebastían and a law graduate.

    Source

    #Western_Sahara #USA #Morocco #Spain #PSOE #Pedro_Sanchez

  • Sahara : Madrid Agreement signature related by CIA

    Tags : Western Sahara, Morocco, Spain, Juan Carlos, Transition, Mauritania, Frente Polisario, Algeria,

    National Intelligence Bulletin November 15, 1975

    Spain, Morocco, and Mauritania agreed yesterday to set up a joint provisional administration to govern Spanish Sahara withdraws completely early next year.

    The Spanish information minister predicted yesterday that Spain would be out of the Sahara by the end of February. He said that details of the new agreeement would not be made public by Spain until the Spanish parliament completed the process – scheduled to start newx Tuesday- of formally decolonizing the territory.

    Preliminary comments from Spanish officials indicate they are unhappy with the pact. One spanish officials who has been involved in the negotiations told the US embassy in Madrid that it was a « bad agreement », but was made necessary by the UN’s demonstrated inability to prevent the situation from degenerating into war.

    With the agreement, Madrid has abandonned ist insistence on a referendum for the area. The Spanish official said that « consultations3 will be held with local tribal leaders on the future of Spanish Sahara. Madrid is uneasy about the arrangement because it expects Algeria to be displeased. Algeria is Spain’s main supplier of natural gas, but Madrid apparently preferred to risk its energy supplies ratcher than become engaged in hostilities in the Sahara.

    The UN may not have a role now that it has been presented with an accomplished fact. At best, there may be an attempt to obtain UN approval.

    The agreeement is victory for Morocco’s King Hassan, who has long sought to annex at least part of Spanish Sahara. Hassan will be able to present the new joint authority as fulfilling a promise he made in August to liberate Spanish Sahara by the end of the year.

    As co-administrators; Rabat and Nouakchott will be able to hand-pick Sahara tribal leaders -including the head of the territory’s general assembly, who defected to Morocco- for any « consultations ». The outcome of such « consultations » would almost certainly be a decision to partition the territory; giving to Morocco the northern region; with its rich phosphate deposits; and to Mauritania the southern portion; with its iron ore.

    Algeria looks like the big loser. The Algerian Foreign Ministry yesterday issued a statement indicating that Algiers would not approve any agreement to which it had not been a party. The statement strongly reiteratd Algeria’s unequivocal support for the principle of self-determination, suggesting it attends to push for a referendum for Spanish Sahara. An official Algerain news agency warned Madrid that any action to divide the territory would be a grave mistake. The agency said such an action would jeopardize Spain’s interests; apparently a reference to Algeria’a natural gas. Although the agency did suggest that the Saharan people would fight to liberate their homeland, it did imply that Algeria would participate directly in the struggle.

    Algeria will; as a firts step, try to enlist support in the UN to reverse the agreement. Algiers will note that the proposed « consultations » are not in accord with an advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice, which upheld the Saharan’s right to self-determination. Althoug a UN report last month stopped short of backing a referendum explicitly, earlier assembly resolutions endorsed self-determination.

    The Algerians will also move to create as many problems for Morocco as possible. The will, for example, continue to provide arms, training, and possibly some « volunteers » to the Polisario Front, a pro-independence Saharan group. With sanctuary in Algeria and suffient arms, a relatively small number of Front guerrillas could carry out sabotage and terrorist attachs directed against the new joint administration. Algiers could also renew its support of dissidents inside Morocco.

    Algeria would probably hope that a Polisario insurgeny againt Moroccan occupation would tie down a large number of troops for some time to come. The Front already claims it controls part of the territory. Front leaders want a complete independence for Spanish Sahara and have vowed to fight to achieve that aim. Press reports from Algeria say that as many as 2555 armes Polisario members aren in the territory.

    Spain

    Prince Juan Carlos is extracting maximum advantage out of his status as « temporary » head of state.

    Capitalizing on the emergeny nature ot the Sahara problem, he has acted decisively and is given much of credit for reversing the Moroccan march. His leadership imagr has been strengthened by his chairing of two National Defense Council meetings -something Franco rarely did. Juan Carlos’ handling of the Sahara issue to date has also improved his rapport with top military leaders whose support he will need in the months to come.

    Althoug Juan Carlos has not been as assertive on domestic issues, Franco’s continued presence has given the prince an excuse not to be. Eben so, the media have applauded Juan Carlos for the recent indications that the government is taking stemps to resolve the sensitive issue of regionalism.K On November 11 the cabinet adopted a decree -initiated several months ago- setting up a commission to prepare a special administrative statute for two of the Basque provinces (…) The press has also reported that a decree approved last May authorizing the teaching of regional languages in schools and their use in local government activities will also be issued soon.

    In general, however, there is a paralysis in domestci policy-making will probably continue as long as Franco lives. During the interregnum, the activities of the ultra-right -if left unchecked- will ci-omplicate Juan Carlo’s efforts to open up Spanish society after he is sworn in as king. Blas Pinar, leader of the ultra-right New Force, has been holding rallies around the country warning of the dangers posed by political parties. Pointing out that the monarchy will derive its legitimacy solely from Franco, he has called Juan Carlos to purge the government of all who have not supported Francoism.

    Right-wing extremists, such as the Guerrilas of Christ the King; who have been linked to the New Force, have recently beaten up student demonstrators and opposition lawyers, and sent threatening letteres to oppositionists and even to some of the more open-minded establishment figures.

    Security forces, meanwhile, have taken full advantage of th’ wide powers granted by last summer’s anti-terrorist decrees to step un arrests and repress all forms of dissent: Il the past few days; according to press estimates; more than 100 people have been arrested, including the editor of the presigious independe newspaper Ya who was indicted for publishing an article on the succession. Six priests have been fined because of their sermons, and the government has banned several conferences by important professors, including former minister Ruiz Gimenez.

    Juan Carlos will not be able to postpone domestic policy decisions much longer even if Franco lives. A decision is due on a successor for Rodriguez de Valcarcel; the conservative president of parliament whose six-year term expires later this month. The position is important because the incumbent automatically becomes president of the Council of the Realm, which is instrumental in the choice of new prime ministers, and the three-man Council of the Regency, which will govern from the time of Franco’s death until Juan Carlos is sworn in.

    Should Juan Carlos decide to retain Rodrgiuez de Valcarcel, the decision will be interpreted by the Spanish left as Francoism without Franco. If someone else is chosen, his political credential will be carefully examined for clues as to the direction in which Juan Carlos plans to take Spain.

    Source

    #Western_sahara #Morocco #Spain #Algeria

  • Algeria’s Foreign Policy: Facing a Crossroads

    Algeria’s Foreign Policy: Facing a Crossroads

    Algeria, USA, China, Russia, Spain, France, gas,

    by Vasilis Petropoulos

    The ongoing war in Ukraine, with its recrystallization of allegiances, can provide Algeria the opportunity to return from a shift towards Russia and China back to a more balanced relationship with great powers.

    USA: From Strategic Partnership to Irrelevance

    In many ways, Algeria’s most direct foreign relations with the United States and Western European countries are focused squarely on its northern neighbors of Spain and France. Yet as the unmatched superpower of the last three decades, the United States has had some type of impact on almost every country’s foreign policy decisions. Foreign direct investments, military aid, and access to American technology are just some of the tools Washington uses to entice its partners and shape their policies abroad. In many cases, securing such ‘gifts’ has become the driver of many countries’ foreign policy, gradually growing the ‘pro-American’ camp.

    Algeria, though never unequivocally ‘pro-American’ or officially aligned with the West, is no exemption to this rule. After espousing a ‘subjective neutrality’ in the Cold War era—leaning towards the communist bloc while remaining in the non-alignment movement—Algeria followed the tide of the post-Soviet unipolar world and deepened its ties with the West.

    This decision came about less as an ideological shift than due to economic opportunities much needed in the years after the Algerian Civil War (1991-2002). Capitalizing on its geostrategic position, its regional cache as an exemplar of revolutionary struggle against colonial rule, and its considerable military capabilities, Algeria subsequently demonstrated its geostrategic value to Washington. Algiers played a significant role in providing intelligence and assisting in counterterrorism operations targeted against Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and, later, ISIS, thus playing a pivotal part in the ‘war on terror.’

    In return, Algiers received large amounts of financial aid and training from its transatlantic partner and the U.S.-Algerian relationship appeared to be on the ascent. Instead, the neutralization of the Daesh threat in 2017, coupled with Trump’s advent to power and his administration’s ‘America First’ approach focused on historical partners and rivals constituted an unfavorable conjuncture for Algeria.

    The relationship clearly degraded when Trump decided to recognize Morocco’s sovereignty over the Western Sahara over claims of the Polisario Front, Algeria’s strategic ally in checking Morocco. In return, Morocco entered the Abraham Accords, recognizing Israel—Washington’s crucial ally in the Middle East. Both U.S. and Moroccan decisions struck at the heart of Algiers’s national security and foreign policy concerns. The concurrent domestic turmoil of the Hirak movement in 2019 did not leave much space for foreign policy priorities, leaving the new government with little political capital to give a concrete response to this massive diplomatic failure by Algiers’ standards.

    Contrary to Algerian expectations that the Biden administration would change course, no reversal of this decision emerged, and the sour relations between Washington and Algiers have not improved since 2020. In fact, it is not an exaggeration to say that they are currently at their lowest point. This nadir, paired with the recent fallout with France and the simultaneous rupture with Spain over the colonial past of the former and the latter’s new approach to the Western Sahara question have all brought Algiers towards unprecedented isolation from the Western world. In turn, this isolation has resulted in Algeria reinforcing its bonds with revisionist powers and downgrading those with the West, a fact that is showcased by Algiers’ punitive attitude and growing intransigence towards France and Spain.

    Russia and China: Open Arms

    Over the past two years, the informal alliance of Russia and China have proved happy to bring Algeria closer in response, providing Algeria with a ticket to ‘de-isolation.’ These ties go back decades; Algiers and Moscow have shared a strong bond since the former’s independence and have built a close partnership. Through a 2006 Memorandum of Understanding, Russia’s Gazprom has also helped Algeria’s state-owned Sonatrach to evolve its LNG output.

    Security relations are especially close; Algeria is dependent on Russian arms imports, buying 81% of its military equipment from Russia over the last three years and serving as Russia’s third arms largest importer, after India and China. During the 2010s, Russian arms exports increased by 129% percent from the previous decade. In 2022, Algeria is Russia’s third largest arms client only behind India and China. Algeria and Russia have conducted joint military exercises in disputed areas, such as South Ossetia in October 2021, and have agreed to perform a similar activity on the Algerian borders with Morocco in November 2022—an agreement made during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

    Not only did Algiers acquiesce to this military exercise amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but its diplomats also refused to condemn Moscow in the UN in March, notwithstanding Algeria’s historical adherence to the principle of state sovereignty. In exchange, Russia supports Algeria in the Western Sahara issue—understood as a way to counter Morocco’s alliance with the United States—and it has forgiven billions of dollars of Algerian debt.

    Similar to the Russian-Algerian ties, the warm relations with China date back to the Cold War era, especially the Mao Zedong period. Recently, Beijing’s global ambitions buttressed by its mammoth Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) project has brought China at the doorsteps of various countries around the world with partnership and investment proposals. North Africa was included in China’s global reach and Algeria is willing to further expand Beijing’s footprint as the latter’s most invaluable regional partner.

    China has already heavily invested in infrastructure in Algeria and trade flow between the two old friends has skyrocketed over the last decade. Chinese businesses in the energy and construction sectors are multiplying on the Algerian soil, while Algiers is a partaker in the BRI project. As part of this project in Algeria, Beijing and Algiers have agreed on a $3.3 billion project for the construction of the first deep-water port in Algeria in the coast town of Cherchell, west of the Algerian capital. The port of El Hamdania will be the second largest deep-water port in Africa. Finally, yet importantly, China is gradually becoming a significant arms exporter to Algeria. Since 2018, Algeria has received or ordered around twenty Chinese reconnaissance and combat drones of assorted classes. In 2018 for example, five Rainbow CH-3 and five Rainbow CH-4 drones were delivered to Algeria and as recently as January 2022, the latter ordered six Rainbow CH-5 Chinese drones that constitute the most advanced version of the series.

    To sum up, Algeria’s interest in its relations with China and Russia are not new developments. Yet Algeria’s perception of Washington as overtly and continually backing Morocco over itself is pushing Algeria further into the open arms of Russia and China and distancing its former ties with the other camp. Both states are happy to exploit Algiers’s disappointment and sense of isolation. By tapping into the old cold war bonds, the two have proved eager to sever Algeria’s policy of balance between them and the West and bring Algiers firmly into the revisionist camp. This strategy seems to have borne fruits so far: Algeria grows more assertive in its relations with the West, as the ongoing diplomatic crisis with Spain shows.

    Rebalancing: Opportunities and Challenges

    While Algeria is trying to curb domestic instability and navigate a changing geopolitical landscape, there are diplomatic opportunities and challenges it should consider before being sucked into this revisionist camp by inertia.

    To begin with, the Russian invasion in Ukraine might have triggered numerous global ripple effects, such as food insecurity, but it has also generated opportunities for Algiers that may help it deal with the ‘isolation challenge’ it has faced with Western states over the past few years.

    In the wake of the invasion, the West demonstrated more unity than any other moment after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The response to Putin’s act of aggression was so uniform and radical that the western countries seemed to rally around a common objective of safeguarding the post-Cold War liberal international order against Russia’s assertive revisionism. However, other actors such as China and Iran have embraced this revisionism and are backing Russia, either explicitly or implicitly.

    In its effort to counter this revisionist bloc, the West needs every possible ally and Algeria can use this card to gain from both sides. Algeria has been presented with the opportunity to become relevant in the eyes of the United States once again while keeping channels of communication open with Russia, China, and Iran, at the same time. In other words, Algeria can adopt a foreign policy akin to that successfully employed by India, i.e., unfettered and non-aligned.

    Furthermore, the war in Ukraine offers Algeria numerous energy-related opportunities. Spiking oil and gas prices have helped to generate high rents to the energy-dependent Algerian economy, which has suffered from the dive in oil prices during the Covid-19 pandemic. Europe has made it clear that it aims to replace the Russian oil and gas imports with LNG (Liquified Natural Gas) and crude oil imports from other partners, with many planned LNG terminals on the horizon.

    Algeria, a longtime energy exporter to southern Europe, therefore has the chance to increase its sales to the whole continent dramatically. By doing so, Algiers will benefit both economically and diplomatically, since it will acquire reinvigorated importance in Washington’s agenda as a crucial partner to Europe’s quest for energy independence, something the U.S. has long prioritized. In fact, Algeria has already harnessed this new dynamic by signing a mammoth energy deal with Italy in April 2022. The agreement will render Algeria Italy’s largest gas supplier, supplanting Russia’s hold on this position for many years.

    Apart from addressing its isolation in the Mediterranean, Algiers must restore its ties with France and Spain to benefit the country’s fragile economy. It urgently needs to access large European markets to profit from the soaring energy prices and to exploit the West’s aspirations to end Russia’s quasi-monopoly on energy exports to Europe. The latter will also bring Washington’s attention back to the region. It’s a fine line—Algeria must also address its economy’s over-dependency on the oil sector and the economic precariousness that this entails. Like other victims of the ‘Dutch disease,’ exports become more expensive and its imports cheaper resulting in the decay of other crucial sectors of the economy.

    Algeria’s challenge in managing its energy exports is also linked with the galloping domestic demand for energy. The conditions are ideal for Algiers to embark on a rally of energy exports in order to fully recover from the economic regression triggered by Covid-19, but it should do so without neglecting the considerable increase in the country’s population every year, which will translate into growing energy demand domestically.

    Nevertheless, a reset with Algiers’ northern neighbors is in order. For such a rapprochement with France and Spain to occur, Algeria should temper the nationalist discourse that permeates its foreign policy with pragmatism and emphasize on the benefits it can reap through further robust trade agreements with its European energy partners. Nor can the thawing Franco/Spanish-Algerian relations be a one sided effort. On their end, Madrid and Paris should also appease Algiers by refraining from raising controversial and sensitive issues, against the latter, and by not publicly siding with Morocco on the Western Sahara issue.

    In France’s case, Champs Elysées seem to understand that and appear willing to take steps towards the easing of tensions. President Macron’s recent appeal to his Algerian counterpart demonstrates the French desire for rapprochement. On the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Algerian independence, the French leader sent a letter to President Tebboune calling for the ‘strengthening of the already strong Franco-Algerian ties’.

    Algeria is perhaps in the most critical period in its diplomatic history since the end of the civil war in the 1990s. Pressing challenges on one side and promising opportunities on the other form the current geopolitical environment. Algeria must recognize this, and that as the war in Ukraine continues to reshape broader multilateral relations, Algiers must determine whether it maintains neutrality or drifts further into the revisionist camp—a decision that will affect its position in the regional and the international systems.

    Washington Institute for Near East Policy, 09/08/2022

    #Algeria #USA #Russia #China #Gas #Petrol

  • Timeline: Spain and Morocco’s rocky diplomatic relations

    Timeline: Spain and Morocco’s rocky diplomatic relations

    Spain, Morocco, Migration, Ceuta, Melilla, Western Sahara,

    MADRID, June 25 (Reuters) – The deaths of at least 18 migrants on Friday during a mass attempt to cross from Morocco into a Spanish enclave took place at a pivotal time for often rocky relations between the neighbouring countries.

    Moroccan authorities said the disaster occurred after migrants attempted to breach a fence into the Melilla enclave, with some dying in a crush after what authorities called a stampede, and others falling as they climbed.

    Spain retained the enclaves of Melilla and Ceuta, which were previously colonial territories, after Morocco gained independence in 1956.

    The following is a timeline of relevant events:

    – September 2005: Spain deploys troops to Ceuta and Melilla after about 600 migrants attempt to breach border fences, resulting in at least 11 migrants being killed and hundreds injured.

    – Feb. 6, 2015: Fifteen migrants drown and more are injured as 400 people attempt to reach Ceuta by swimming around a seawall from Morocco. A judge in Ceuta later dismisses a case brought against 18 Spanish Civil Guards who fired rubber bullets at them.

    – May 17-19, 2021 – Over several days, about 8,000 people swim into Ceuta or clamber over the border fence after Moroccan authorities appear to loosen controls.

    The surge in crossings comes days after Rabat expresses anger over Madrid’s decision to allow Ibrahim Ghali, the leader of a rebel movement, into Spain for COVID-19 treatment. Ghali leads the Polisario Front which seeks independence for Western Sahara, a territory Rabat regards as its own.

    – March 18, 2022 – Morocco reveals that Spain has changed its position on Western Sahara, describing Rabat’s autonomy plan for the territory as « the most serious, realistic and credible » basis for solving the dispute.

    – April 7, 2022 – Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez travels to Rabat to meet Moroccan King Mohammed VI to mark a « new phase in relations based on mutual respect, mutual trust, permanent consultation and frank and faithful cooperation ».

    – May 15, 2002 – The Interior ministers of Spain and Morocco reactivate their working group and agree to foster cooperation against illegal migration including through joint border patrols and an intensified crackdown on trafficking networks.

    – June 24, 2022 – Some 2,000 migrants storm border fences from the Moroccan town of Nador into Melilla in an incident that leaves at least 18 migrants dead. Human rights groups say scores of injured migrants were left untreated and the death toll is likely to rise.

    #Spain #Morocco #Melilla #WesternSahara #Migration

  • Secret visit d’El Hammouchi to Spain

    Secret visit d’El Hammouchi to Spain

    Spain, Morocco, Abdellatif El Hammouchi, FBI, CIA, Intelligence services, DGSN,

    Hammouchi, the architect of Moroccan espionage with Pegasus, met with the director of the CNI.
    The Spanish government has concealed his visit to Spain, which was aired by the Moroccan press, in order to meet with Esperanza Casteleiro. « He came to iron out the differences, » say sources familiar with the meeting.

    The Moroccan authorities have agreed to give explanations to Spain about their use of the malicious Pegasus programme. Abdellatif Hammouchi, the man who promoted espionage from Morocco with this malicious Israeli-made programme, was in Madrid on 16 and 17 June to meet with Esperanza Casteleiro, the new director of the National Intelligence Centre (CNI), according to a source familiar with the meeting. « He came to iron out differences, » he said.

    Reports of his « working visit » to Madrid were picked up last week by the Moroccan press. He met with his counterparts from « security and intelligence », according to the weekly ‘L’Observateur du Maroc’, directed by Ahmed Charai, a collaborator of the Moroccan foreign secret service (DGED), according to several documents uncovered in 2014 and a court ruling in 2015. The Spanish Ministry of the Interior claims that he did not have any appointments at its headquarters. At the CNI, its new communications officer did not respond to calls.

    If the Moroccan responsible has given explanations in Madrid, probably denying his guilt, it now remains for the Israeli authorities to do so. Pegasus is manufactured by the Israeli company NSO, linked to its secret services (Mossad and Shinbet) and, as it is a cyber-weapon, the Ministry of Defence of the Hebrew country must authorise its export. The magistrate José Luis Calama, of the Audiencia Nacional, who is investigating the cyber espionage suffered by several members of the Spanish government, sent a rogatory commission to Israel and another judicial commission, on 7 June, which he himself will head. He wants to interrogate, among others, the president of NSO. He does not yet have a date for his visit. Hammouchi, 56, stopped in Madrid from Washington, where he had met with the directors of the CIA, William Burns, and the FBI, Christopher Wray. In Morocco, he heads both the National Security, which is the conventional police force, and the General Directorate of Territorial Supervision (DGST), the secret body that, in addition to fighting jihadism, pursues opponents, including journalists. Never before has a police chief wielded so much power in Morocco.

    Forbidden Stories, a consortium of 17 major media outlets, revealed on 18 July last year that some 10,000 mobile phones around the world had been targeted in 2019 and perhaps beyond by Moroccan intelligence, which used Pegasus to spy on them. The majority – some 6,000 – were Algerian, but there were also some 1,000 French ones – including that of President Emmanuel Macron and 14 of his ministers – and four Spanish ones, that of Moroccan journalist Ali Lmrabet, those of two Sahrawis, Aminatou Haidar and Brahim Dahane and, the first to appear in chronological order, that of this journalist who writes. A further 200 were targeted by the Moroccan secret services, as reported by the Guardian on 3 May, but the list is not yet known. « Aldellatif Hammouchi, the Moroccan spy who is putting France in trouble, » headlined the Parisian weekly ‘Le Point’ on 21 July 2021 on its front page, pointing to the senior police officer. « Abdellatif Hammouchi, Morocco’s supercop at the heart of the Pegasus scandal », said the following day the digital daily ‘Mediapart’. « Pegasus brings the all-powerful head of the Moroccan intelligence services out of the shadows and calls into question the role of this high-ranking palace official whom France now fears, » it added.

    The Moroccan authorities then denied in a statement that they had bought and used Pegasus, but senior French officials confirmed in informal conversations with journalists reported in the French press that the cyber-attack on mobile phones originated in Morocco. In an interview with the daily ‘Le Monde’, published on 27 December, Israeli Foreign Minister Yaïr Lapid was asked whether Israel had withdrawn the licence to operate Pegasus from Morocco. He did not deny that the Moroccan services had it. He replied to the newspaper: « It is a very strict licence: we have exposed all the material we had to the French authorities ». Israel gave explanations to France. The France-Israel relationship then hit a speed bump, but this was overcome in March, when French President Emmanuel Macron accompanied his Israeli counterpart, Yitzhak Herzog, to Toulouse to honour the memory of several Jewish children murdered a decade ago by a terrorist. Paris’s relationship with Rabat is still soured by this espionage episode. Proof of this is that Mohammed VI did not personally congratulate Macron on his re-election as president. The monarch arrived on holiday in the French capital on 1 June and Macron has yet to meet with him. On previous private visits to Paris, he has always been received in an audience at the Elysée Palace.

    Despite promising « transparency », Bolaños has not revealed how many high-ranking officials’ mobile phones tested positive in the CCN-CERT review. In the atmosphere of « polar cold » that characterises the Franco-Moroccan relationship, as described by the publication ‘Africa Intelligence’, Paris refuses to grant Schengen visas to high-ranking Moroccan executives. According to the publication, the latest to be punished this month were 10 executives of L’Office Chérifien des Phosphates, Morocco’s largest public company. They did not get the precious document to participate in the Vivatech technology fair in the French capital. Moroccans frequently circumvent the French obstacle by applying for visas at Spanish consulates in Morocco, according to ‘Africa Intelligence’, information confirmed by unofficial Spanish diplomatic sources.

    The Pegasus infiltration of the mobile phones of President Pedro Sánchez and his ministers of Defence and Interior – as well as the attempt to spy on that of the Minister of Agriculture – occurred in May/June last year, the height of the Spanish-Moroccan crisis, although it was only discovered last April, as revealed on 2 May by the Minister of the Presidency, Félix Bolaños. Despite promising « transparency », Bolaños has not revealed how many more mobiles of high-ranking officials, who are not ministers, tested positive in the extensive review carried out this spring by the National Cryptology Centre, which is part of the CNI.

    The Spanish government has not pointed to Morocco as the power that launched the espionage – the foreign minister, José Manuel Albares, has even publicly exculpated it – but it does know that it is responsible, and not only because of the dates on which the cyber-attack took place. This is indicated by confidential reports from the CNI. It was also indicated to the then Foreign Affairs Minister, Arancha González Laya, when her mobile phone was analysed in June last year and tested positive for malware. In an interview published on 8 June with ‘El Periódico de España’, the former minister lamented that everything was used against her « in the crisis with Morocco: eavesdropping, denunciations and press campaigns ». Action by Christians for the Abolition of Torture (ACAT), a prestigious French ecumenical NGO, filed two complaints in France against Hammouchi for torture perpetrated in Morocco, which is why the Moroccan supercop has not officially set foot in France since 20 February 2014. On that day, a Parisian investigating judge summoned him during a working visit to the French capital, and he hurriedly fled the country.

    Hammouchi has always been pampered by the Spanish authorities, whether the government is led by the Popular Party or the PSOE. In October 2014, eight months after his hasty flight from France, the Ministry of the Interior, then headed by Jorge Fernández Díaz, announced that he was awarded the Honorary Cross of Police Merit. In September 2019, the head of this portfolio, Fernando Grande-Marlaska, had the Council of Ministers approve the awarding of the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Civil Guard, the highest decoration of this institution.

    El Confidencial, 21 June 2022

    #Morocco #ElHammouchi #Spain #USA #Intelligence #CIA #FBI

  • Sánchez, Europe and Western Sahara

    Sánchez, Europe and Western Sahara

    Western Sahara, Spain, Morocco, Algeria, France, USA, Europe, NATO, neo-colonialism,


    Jesus L. Garay
    Member of Asociación de Amigos y Amigas de la RASD (Association of Friends of SADR)

    We need all the strength of solidarity and all the democratic political will to stop this neo-colonialist coup, to dismantle the fallacious arguments of political expediency and false humanitarian compassion deployed by the PSOE and to launch an effective social and political mobilisation.

    Three months after Morocco leaked Pedro Sánchez’s letter in which the Spanish government modified its formal position on the Western Sahara issue, the echoes of the reactions provoked by this turnaround, far from abating, continue to be at the forefront of political and media statements, this time in the wake of Algeria’s suspension of the friendship and cooperation treaty with Spain.

    The Spanish government’s decision undoubtedly has many implications that would be impossible to cover briefly, just as it is impossible to deal with the multitude of blunders that have been and are being made in commenting on the various aspects of this issue.

    Above all, the implications of the government’s position on the internal politics of the state have been commented on; but beyond generic statements and motions, if anything has become clear on this issue it is that the parties that make up or support this government are incapable – or perhaps simply have no real will – of reversing the decision to implicitly recognise Moroccan sovereignty over the Spanish colony. Equally, it seems that social organisations have not been able to channel the sympathy and solidarity that the Sahrawi cause arouses in the vast majority of the population into a clear expression of rejection or indignation. However, as Algeria’s decision shows, it is never too late to take the initiative.

    However, Algeria’s latest decisions highlight a dimension that has been almost silenced by the noise caused by the forms and timing of the government’s decision. Indeed, at the international level, the declarations of support for the Moroccan occupation reveal that the decision is not the result of a simple ‘hot flash’ by Mr Sánchez, as some media outlets are trying to describe it – although there is clearly some improvisation – nor, as is being done especially on social networks, a simple surrender to Morocco’s brutal blackmail – which is also the case.

    The Spanish government’s current position is the result of a far-reaching strategic effort to consolidate a balance of power in the Arab Maghreb that is definitely favourable to the neo-colonial interests of the capitalist West. This effort, initially led by the United States, as befits its status as a hegemonic power, found its ultimate expression in the declaration of an outgoing president, Donald Trump, accepting Morocco’s sovereignty over Western Sahara in exchange for the full restoration of relations between the Kingdom of Morocco and the state of Israel.

    In the current international order, however, geopolitical control of this area of North Africa does not lie directly with the US, but with Europe. Not the Europe of rights and democratic values that they want to sell us, but the Europe of migratory necropolitics, a subsidiary of NATO and heir to the most recent colonialism, which in recent years has been sliding towards the ideological far right.

    Many of the reactions of policy-makers to Algeria’s severing of relations with Spain demonstrate that, at bottom, Europe’s view of Africa has hardly changed since the Berlin conference of 1885 and, like the US with Latin America, it continues to treat the African continent as its backyard: a kind of huge estate from which to extract the resources necessary for its economic and social development and where African inhabitants and leaders should confine themselves to doing that job effectively.

    The list of assassinations, coups d’état and military interventions to control independence movements or simply to « moderate » policies deemed potentially dangerous to Europe’s interests is not closed. France, the UK and Germany openly and clandestinely strive to condition the political and economic life of the peoples of Africa, because the direction of the European economy they lead largely depends on it.

    Certainly, European neo-colonial practice is in open contradiction with the legal framework created after the Second World War, the so-called international legality, which is why, to a large extent, the interventions are of a « covert » type or simply silenced from public opinion. And yes, Spain, although it is the only European country that still has a recognised colony in Africa, Western Sahara, plays a marginal role in this endeavour. Like remaining in NATO, this is part of the price it had to pay in exchange for EU membership.

    In this context, the Arab Maghreb has become one of the most obvious theatres of confrontation between neo-colonial interests and the rights of African peoples, with Western Sahara probably the most decisive battleground in this respect. If Morocco finally succeeds in appropriating the strategic territory of Western Sahara and controlling its assets, the West will have largely succeeded in balancing the main power in the region, which is currently Algeria.

    The only problem is the resistance put up by the small Sahrawi people, using international law in their favour. Indeed, the Saharawi people, at least since the creation of the Polisario Front, have based the legitimacy of their struggle on international law. This has been an important asset in confronting colonialism and reaffirming their will to achieve the right to self-determination and independence. Thus, every time the neo-colonial forces have tried to justify or perpetuate their misdeeds, each and every international body and court has ratified the legitimacy of the Saharawi resistance and condemned colonial practices.

    So-called international legality is, curiously enough, a creation of those who support the occupation of the territory, the plundering of its resources, and the attempt to annihilate the original population. That is, the political-economic group of governments and companies that finance and provide the means and weapons for the occupation of Western Sahara. In this lobby of death and plunder, Spanish governments and companies do have, for historical and geographical reasons, a prominent role.

    It has been 50 years of an unstable balance between legitimacy and economic and geopolitical interests. It is a struggle in which neither side can be considered the definitive winner. Neo-colonialism has tried to make the Saharawi people surrender by bombing civilian refugees, mass disappearances, the invasion of settlers, the massive plundering of resources, all kinds of tactics to delay the implementation of UN resolutions, lies and silence, and the blatant support of Spain, France and the USA for the genocidal regime of Mohamed VI, but the Saharawi resistance continues, supported by international law. The sale of arms, the gigantic theft of phosphates and fish, the agricultural business with the King of Morocco, the fossil and green energy from Western Sahara exploited by companies such as Siemens-Gamesa, thus appear as facts that have been fulfilled but are impossible to justify or legalise.

    The key to breaking this cruel stalemate could lie in a series of rulings by the European Court of Justice which, since 2016, have been narrowing the margin for these colonial practices to be carried out, by declaring the economic agreements with Morocco on which they are based to be null and void. Throughout 2023, it is expected that the highest European judicial instance will definitively resolve the dispute in favour of the Polisario Front’s arguments, which should lead the EU to rethink its relations with Morocco as a whole. Not only trade relations, but all issues affecting the territory of Western Sahara, which Morocco considers its own and which constitutes not only the Alawi kingdom’s main source of wealth, but, as we have explained, the only hope, both for Morocco and for Europe, of being able to confront its main rival on the Maghreb chessboard.

    The Spanish government’s decision, therefore, would be part of a plan to impose the reality of the occupation through international political consensus, whatever the decision of the European courts. Building such a consensus in the European case requires the direct involvement of the two main governments, France and Germany, and, in the case of Western Sahara, the colonial power of reference, Spain – as would be Belgium in the case of the Republic of Congo or Portugal in the case of Mozambique. Once this « realpolitik » consensus has been built, it would be easy to bring together the majority of European governments – although perhaps not as easy as it has been in the case of the war in Ukraine – and, together with the United States, impose the law of the strongest in this corner of the world.

    That is why we need all the strength of solidarity and all the democratic political will to stop this neo-colonialist coup, to dismantle the fallacious arguments of political expediency and false humanitarian compassion that the PSOE has deployed, and to launch an effective social and political mobilisation. Because it is not only the freedom and rights of an African people that are at stake, but also whether or not governments and companies can impose their will above the law, which they themselves claim to promote.

    NAIZ, 10 juin 2022

    #WesternSahara #Morocco #Spain #NATO #France #USA #Neocolonialism #Maghreb

  • Laya: Everything was used in the crisis with Morocco

    Arancha Gonzalez Laya, Morocco, Spain, Front Polisario, Brahim Ghali, Algeria, Pegasus, spying, Western Sahara

    Gonzalez Laya: « Everything was involved in the crisis with Morocco: eavesdropping, denunciations and press campaigns ».


    The former head of MFA assures in an interview with ‘El Periódico de España’ that everything was used to « muddy » the attention to BrahimGhali, alluding to Morocco. « And when I say everything, has been everything »

    Sacrificed in the remodeling of the Government last July to try to calm Morocco, Arancha González Laya (San Sebastián, 1969), is now dean of the Paris School of International Affairs*. She remains linked to what could be summed up as ‘power’, because this institution acts as an incubator for some of the next international leaders. But she doesn’t seem to miss him. She exercised it in the Ministry and lost it, without an iota of nostalgia. She also helps the wide network of contacts that she treasures. Having concluded her stage of « public service » – it is obvious that she feels more like a high-ranking official than a politician – she is now going to dedicate herself to rethinking Europe and imagining the idea of a new political community on the continent, launched by Emmanuel Macron.

    Q. She was dismissed in July of last year, in the middle of the diplomatic crisis with Morocco. Did she become aware that this matter was going to cost her job?

    A. I have never acted either to keep myself in office or to lose it. I have always remained faithful to the principles, interests, and values of my country, which are what I had to represent.

    Q. What did the PM tell you when he called you?

    A. That must be within the discretion between the PM and his ministers.

    Q. Morocco turned the reception of BrahimGhali into an element of confrontation against Spain and against you, but the root of the problem was something else: the fact that the Government had not made any gesture of support for the change in the US position on Western Sahara.

    A. Everything served at that time to muddy a decision of a humanitarian nature towards a Spanish citizen, who needed immediate help. Humanitarian care has a long tradition in our foreign policy. Saharawis and many other nationalities. We must defend this tooth and nail because it is part of our identity as a country. And we also must be defenders of relations with our neighbors, Morocco, Algeria, Libya, Senegal, Mauritania, and many others, understanding that they will only be good if they are managed from co-responsibility and represent the interests of both parties.

    Q. Was it a mistake to welcome Ghali without measuring the consequences? I mean, you must have been aware that there was a prior malaise about Western Sahara. Shouldn’t he have at least minimized the impact by warning Rabat instead of opting for a discreet entry by the leader of POLISARIO?

    A. It is that they are issues that run through different channels. Spain has always been very clear about the need to seek an agreed solution, and this is very important, in accordance with international law and giving the maximum support to the UN. That has been the constant in our country’s position and it had to be defended very clearly, helping the parties, trying not to do anything that could frustrate that agreement, but bearing in mind that it was one more issue (in the relationship with Morocco), not the only one. We must not mix the plans because if we do, we may fall into the temptation of restricting Spain’s ability to exercise its foreign policy.

    Q. But a previous call would not have prevented Morocco from using it against Spain and against you.

    A. History cannot be remade and that is why it makes no sense to enter in considerations of the type what if, what if, what if… I insist, Spain must have the capacity to exercise an autonomous foreign policy, always seeking the best relations with our neighbors. I did it during my tenure. I have been the FM who has made the most visits to these countries and I paid particular attention to all of them.

    Q. Has Spain given in to Morocco, first with your dismissal and then with support for its autonomy plan for Western Sahara?

    A. You will allow me not to enter intosuch considerations. I am extremely respectful of the principle of loyalty to the Government in which I have served. I will not go into those considerations.

    Q. Your telephone number, like that of the PM and other ministers, was attacked at the worst moments of the diplomatic crisis with Morocco

    A. Everything has served in this crisis to muddy that humanitarian aid. And when I say everything has been everything: wiretaps, complaints, campaigns, including press campaigns. It has been quite evident. For me it is a chapter that belongs to the past.

    Q. Minister, but it has not been known if your phone, like the rest, was spied on with Pegasus. In the Executive they have not wanted to confirm it. They maintain that they are not aware that in their case it was with this ‘software’, which Morocco has.

    A. The telephone numbers of those responsible for government have a channel for their protection and to investigate violations of their integrity and I believe that this question should be addressed to whom it belongs, which is not me.

    Q. But did you put your phone in the hands of the competent authorities within the Government, when you thought that your mobile could have been attacked?

    A. Yes, but all these questions, I would prefer if you addressed them where they belong, which is not me. I want to be, I repeat, tremendously scrupulous with the rules of the game, especially in a matter like this, which is very serious.

    Q. You pointed to wiretapping, complaints… the accusations against you for Ghali’s entry have just been dismissed. Do you think Rabat was behind? I say this for two circumstances. There was at least one accusation with Moroccan interests and the judge’s actions have been very striking. He never accepted any of the MFA arguments and just completely changed his mind a week before the agreement with Morocco on Western Sahara was known. The Court has knocked down all his investigation.

    A. Of this episode, certainly a bit curious, I am left with the decision of the Provincial Court of Zaragoza, after an appeal filed by the State Attorney, to whom I have much to thank, for the good work in defending the interests of our country. The court has said the same thing that I have maintained from the beginning. First, that it was a humanitarian decision. And second, that it was done in accordance with the law. But we have a very serious problem in our country, which is a judicialization of politics and the growing politicization of justice.

    Q. Do you think that after the Western Sahara, Mohamed VI’s next claim will be Ceuta and Melilla?

    A. We must be very clear to anyone who has any doubts: Ceuta and Melilla are part of Spain and, therefore, of the EU.

    Q. Can you help them understand the establishment of commercial customs at the two borders, which is one of the issues included in the joint statement with Morocco?

    A. I don’t want to make value judgments about which are the elements that would reinforce or not… It is very clear: Ceuta and Melilla have been and are part of Spain.

    Q. How deep do you think the diplomatic crisis with Algeria is now?

    A. I am going to be very cautious on this issue as well, but I do believe that Spain should have the best relations with all its neighbors. With Algeria, with Morocco, with Libya, with Mauritania, with Senegal. And when I say the best, they must be the best. In a neighborhood we all need each other.

    Q. Can the gas supply to Spain be at risk?

    A. I hope not, and I want to believe not. Spain and Algeria, and more broadly Algeria and the EU, have a framework of relations that should allow them to deepen, also in the energy field. Spanish firms are committed to investments in Algeria and to their industrial project in this area.

    Q. Can’t Italy get ahead of us?

    A. I believe that relations between Spain and Algeria must be redirected. It’s very important. For the two countries.

    Q. I mentioned before the historical position of Spain of a solution on Western Sahara around the UN, but in the last two years several countries, the US, France, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, have spoken in favor of the Moroccan plan.

    A. There will only be long-term stability if there is an agreement between the parties. That pact can be illuminated only through the PESG de Mistura.

    Q. But, is it more difficult now, when Spain has opted for an option?

    A. It is more necessary than ever.
    (…)

    *(Paris School of International Affairs (PSIA) is a graduate school of Sciences Po [also referred to as the Institutd’études politiques de Paris])

    El Periódico, Jun 07, 2022

    #Spain #Morocco #Algeria #WesternSahara #Arancha_Gonzalez_Laya #Pegasus #Spying

  • Guariglia: « Italy does not want to harm Spain in Algeria »

    Italy, Algeria, Spain, Gas,

    Riccardo Guariglia (Chicago, 1961) is the Italian ambassador to Spain. He arrived with the ship from Genoa to the port of Barcelona two years ago, during the worst moment of the pandemic. From Barcelona to Madrid by car on deserted roads. Few people will have entered Spain like this. Guariglia, of Neapolitan origin, has been ambassador to Poland and head of State’s Diplomatic Protocol. He measures the answers very well and does not shy away from any question.

    Q. Italy is knocking on Algeria’s door to expand natural gas purchase contracts with the aim of lessening its dependence on Russia. Italy is offering technological investments to Algeria to expand its capacity to extract gas. Italy has offered itself to Algeria as a platform for the distribution of its gas to the rest of Europe. Is Italy trying to take advantage of the crisis in relations between Spain and Algeria?

    A. I categorically deny that assumption. There is no such intention on the part of Italy. Our country is only trying to become independent from Russian supplies [40% as far as natural gas is concerned]. Italy is much more dependent on Russia than Spain. What is Italy doing? Italy is visiting its other suppliers to extend the contracts. I am referring to Azerbaijan, Egypt, Mozambique, Congo, Angola,and Algeria. With Algeria we have a gas pipeline that has not been operating at full capacity for years [the Enrico Mattei-Tramsmed gas pipeline, which crosses Tunisia and reaches Sicily by underwater pipeline] and we have proposed to make more use of it. I don’t think that harms Spain.

    Q. Have you discussed it with the Spanish Government?

    A. I know that the Spanish Government understands this. We are not trying to influence relations between Algeria and Spain at all. We do not want to harm anyone, and I must add that relations between Italy and Spain are in one of their best moments.

    Q. Does Italy support the resumption of the Midcat, the gas pipeline that was supposed to reinforce the connection with the rest of Europe through the Catalan Pyrenees, paralyzed more than three years ago?

    A. Italy supports the resumption of the Midcat. [SNAM, a public company that manages the Italian gas network, has 40% of Téréga, a company that manages the gas network in the south of France].

    Q. Has the Italian Government spoken with the French about the resumption of Midcat?

    A. As ambassador to Spain, I cannot specify this for you, but I can tell you that we are in communication with the Spanish Government about interconnections. Italy has also proposed the possibility of an offshore gas pipeline between Barcelona and the Italian terminal in Livorno (Tuscany). A feasibility study is being carried out on this gas pipeline, which is cited in the latest EU document on energy policy (Repower EU plan). At the same time, work is being done on the hypothesis of a maritime corridor connecting Barcelona and the Livorno and La Spezia plants through a chain of small LNG transport vessels. With eight LNG regasification plants [seven in Spain and one in Portugal], the Iberian Peninsula has a large capacity. This is an important fact. The goal is for Europe to be as independent as possible from Russian gas. Any initiative to open new routes and obtain better supplies must be considered strategic.

    Q. Let’s go back to North Africa. Do Italy and Spain share the same criteria on the policy that should be developed in relation to North Africa?

    A. Both countries are two main actors in the Mediterranean. Italy has always wanted to reinforce stability in this region, developing economic and political relations between the two Mediterranean shores that are mutually advantageous. We are very involved in seeking stability in Libya [a country in a state of civil war for ten years] and we are also seeking stability in the Sahel, a key region for the fight against terrorism and action against illegal migration. North Africa is, in turn, a heterogeneous group of countries and its specificities must be considered. Italy considers it very important, for example, to promote investments in the generation of renewable energies in North Africa and in the manufacture of green hydrogen, which will be one of the energy vectors of the future. Our objectives are surely very similar to those of Spain.

    Q. We were talking before about the relations between Italy and Spain. You claimed that they are better than ever. It hasn’t always been this way. There were moments of manifest coldness. Romano Prodi ended up angry with José María Aznar. Silvio Berlusconi and José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero cannot be said to have been in communion. Matteo Renzi and Mariano Rajoy ignored each other…

    A. I think that now we are facing a very consolidated relationship. These last two years there has been a real leap in quality. In the very delicate situation that we are experiencing, Italy and Spain have matured the conviction of making a common front in many aspects. During the negotiation of the Next Generation EU plans (pandemic), Spain and Italy acted jointly. Now, there is a close collaboration before the war in Ukraine. There is a lot of communication between the two governments.

    La Vanguardia, Juny 07, 2022

    #Spain #Italy #Algeria #Gas

  • Morocco to buy LNG directly from Spain

    Morocco, Spain, Algeria, NATO, Europe, Gas, LNG,

    The Government of Morocco after long weigh has decided to initiate the procedures to use Spain as an intermediary to guarantee the supply of natural gas. The African country has not been able to access Algerian gas since last October and since then it has studied the best way to obtain the precious hydrocarbon, which it must now acquire on international markets and, to do so, it will create a trading company in our country.

    Will create a marketing company in Spain

    Specifically, sources from the energy sector assure Merca2 that the Moroccan National Electricity and Drinking Water Office (ONEE) has contacted the Spanish authorities to create a company that is registered as a gas marketer in Spain. Its mission will be to buy Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), bring it in methane tankers, treat it in one of the regasification plants that our country has and send it to Morocco through the GME pipeline, which will work in the opposite direction. “The ONEE was not very clear about whether it should create a new marketer in Spain or sign an agreement with an existing company, but it has finally decided to start the process to be self-sufficient and not depend on third parties. The threat of the Government of Algeria to Spain seems to have weighed on that decision,” indicate the sources consulted.

    Since Spain and Morocco began negotiations to reopen the GME pipeline in the opposite direction, Algeria has expressed its opposition because it feared that the gas that it delivers to our country through Medgaz (and that reaches the coast of Almería) could end up in hands of Mohamed VI’s regime. Especially after an email was leaked from the 3rd Deputy PM of the Spanish Government and Minister for the Ecological Transition, Teresa Ribera, in which she anticipated the reopening of the Maghreb gas pipeline in the opposite direction (north south). The red line imposed by Algeria was accompanied by a threat: to cut off the supply through Medgaz if Spain was not able to certify that each cubic meter sent to its southern neighbor came from other countries.

    Since then, Ribera has taken advantage of every public intervention to ensure that « not a single molecule of the gas that reaches Morocco can be attributed to gas from Algeria. » Ribera’s strategy – closely followed by the PM, who does not trust his own minister – was to make Spanish infrastructure available in Morocco « in commercial terms », with the « indispensable condition » that Morocco be the one purchase the LNG. « The origin of that gas and the place where it is unloaded will be transparent and public so that we can be sure that the volume, origin and destination complies with that commitment to Algeria, » Ribera said last April at parliamentary HQ.

    Buy LNG and treat it in spanish plants

    And said and done. Although at first the initial idea was for Enagás technicians to certify that the gas that would travel through the infrastructure of the Maghreb did not come from Algeria, finally the Moroccan Ministry of Energy, Mines and Sustainable Development has considered it more appropriate that a company from your country, dependent on the ONEE, initiate the procedures to register as a marketer in Spain and thus purchase LNG directly using the regasification infrastructures of our country. This soap opera, propitiated to a great extent by the change of position of the Spanish Government regarding Western Sahara, takes place at a moment in which Algeria has decided to reinforce its alliance with Italy, which will become its main client.

    The agreement between Italy and Algeria

    The agreement reached between the Algerian President AbdelmadjidTebboune and the Italian PM Mario Draghi will serve to send part of the gas from the HassiR’Mel field to central Europe next winter, leaving Spain in the background. For this reason, as Merca2 advanced exclusively, Blackrock and the rest of the companies that manage the Medgaz gas pipeline have decided to put in a drawer the expansion project that contemplated the construction of a second tube on the seabed to reach the coasts Spanish.

    The rapprochement with Morocco is not only part of the strategy of Pedro Sánchez’s cabinet, but is also shared by the main opposition party. A few days ago, the SG of the Popular Party (PP), Alberto NúñezFeijoo, told the Moroccan PM Aziz Akhannouch, that his political party « will strengthen its commitments and ties of neighborliness, reciprocity, honesty and loyalty » with Morocco. It is not in vain that the Spanish strategy with respect to Morocco is marked by the network of NATO alliances and the two major Spanish parties have closed ranks obeying the orders that come from Washington. Spanish intelligence sources assure this newspaper that Sánchez and Feijoo have been promised that our country will play a very important role in creating an energy hub in southern Europe that promotes the development of renewable energies in Morocco. An objective behind which hides a much more important element: the need for the US to close ranks in North Africa in the face of the new international scenario that opens with the war in Ukraine.

    The White House presses Europe

    Precisely after the Russian military intervention, the White House began to pressure the European authorities to take advantage of the situation and strengthen the role of Morocco, which although it does not belong to NATO, is a country that the US considers vital to reduce China’s influence in the African continent. That is why the Biden Administration invited the country last May to a summit at the German base in Ramstein, which was also attended by other countries that are not part of the Atlantic alliance. “The main objective of the US State Department is to prevent the eternal confrontation between Algeria and Morocco from blowing up interests in the area and for this it has made it clear to both countries that they are condemned to understand each other. Spain and Italy are responsible for lubricating that relationship and the war in Ukraine is an opportunity to do so. The forgotten continent is a great source of natural resources that are now more important than ever”, point out military sources.

    The NATO Summit in Madrid

    With all these elements on the table, the NATO Summit will be held in Madrid at the end of June, a meeting in which Morocco will also participate, and which the Spanish PM hopes will serve to « give a strong message to the southern part of the Alliance » through the new « security concept » that will come out of this meeting. Sánchez referred to this issue in his recent participation in the Davos Forum, which some have already dubbed the « Madrid Strategic Concept » and which will consist of using immigration, the energy issue and Islamist terrorism to reinforce the role of NATO in the region.

    The great stone in the shoe that the Government has in its relationship with Morocco is the sovereignty of Ceuta and Melilla, which the regime of Mohamed VI has not renounced. The intelligence sources consulted assure that after the summer Morocco will resume its offensive to reclaim these cities, even though the Spanish government said last April that the turn with respect to Western Sahara would reduce tension with the southern neighbor in this matter. For now, the truth is that the expected commercial customs are still closed, and this week Sánchez will appear in Lower Chamber to explain the new relationship established with Morocco since last March he sent the famous letter to Mohamed VI.

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