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Lol Algeria and Morocco are now buying tit for tat - Morocco got 13 Bayraktar TB2 last week and Algeria replied with 24 Wing Loong drones

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Algeria-Morocco: Heightened tensions as Rabat receives new combat drones from Turkey
Closed airspace, halted gas supplies, purchase of weapons: the diplomatic crisis between Algiers and Rabat deepens

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By
MEE staff
Published date: 28 September 2021 16:26 UTC | Last update: 11 hours 50 secs ago


Weeks after Algeria broke off diplomatic ties with Morocco, Rabat’s purchase of new combat drones from a private Turkish firm has only added more fuel to the fire between the neighbouring countries.

In mid-September, Morocco received 13 Bayraktar TB2 combat drones, according to a post on Far-Maroc, an unofficial Facebook page of the Moroccan Armed Forces (FAR), which was picked up by various local media sources.

The drone order was reportedly placed “to modernise the arsenal of the Moroccan Armed Forces in order to prepare for any danger and recent hostilities” according to Far-Maroc.

In recent weeks, after the contract was signed with the private Turkish company Baykar, for an amount reported in the media as $70m, Morocco has sent military personnel for training in Turkey, according to Far-Maroc.


Over the past few years Baykar, managed by a son-in-law of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has exported its leading model, the Bayraktar TB2, to Ukraine, Qatar and Azerbaijan.

In turn, Algeria, which already has six types of drones in its arsenal, including four attack drones, has, according to the website Menadefense, ordered 24 WingLoong II drones from the Chinese company AVIC.

The drones in each of these cases are combat drones (equipped with missiles that seek a target, destroy it and return to base).

However, information disclosed on 15 September in the Africa Intelligence confidential letter indicated that Rabat is planning to set up a programme for the development of "kamikaze’" drones in collaboration with the BlueBird Aero Systems, a subsidiary of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI).

According to the letter, the “establishment of a local subsidiary, with the assistance of Israeli operators, would be a tradeoff for the purchase of tactical observation drones by Rabat from an IAI subsidiary."

Unlike combat drones, kamikaze drones are filled with explosives that can drop down on their target when ordered to and explode on impact.

'No need to dramatise'
Although not yet confirmed by either the Moroccan or the Israeli side, this information does raise concerns at a time of heightened diplomatic tensions between Algeria and Morocco, largely fed by the media of both countries.

On 27 September, the French-language Algerian daily El Watan attributed responsibility for the "precariousness of stability" to “Morocco’s attitude that consists of blocking the UN mission for a referendum on self-determination in Western Sahara". Meanwhile, the Moroccan website, Le360, has accused the Algerian Foreign Minister Ramtane Lamamra of "hysteria" and described Algeria's President Abdelmadjid Tebboune as a "puppet president".


The recent normalisation of diplomatic relations between Morocco and Israel, following US recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara, has intensified tensions with Algeria, a fervent supporter of the Palestinian and Saharan causes.

These relations took a new turn last Wednesday when Algeria announced that it had closed its airspace to all Moroccan commercial and military air traffic.

At the end of August, Algeria also announced its intention not to renew the operating licence of the Maghreb-Europe gas pipeline, depriving Morocco of a part of its gas supplies. In Morocco, some media voices expressed concern at the potential undermining of the electrical interconnection system between the countries.

Last week, Algeria also closed a section of the strategic national route linking the southern Moroccan city of Agadir and a city located about 900km to the north of Algeria (Bouarfa), from the Algerian side.

“There’s no need to over-dramatise the acquisition of these drones: these were planned purchases. Morocco, like Algeria, has been buying these drones for a long time and will continue to buy them, there’s nothing out of the ordinary in it,” Akram Kharief, a presenter on website Menadefense, told Middle East Eye, pointing out that recent theatres of war featuring the use of drones bore no comparison to the Algeria-Morocco scenario.


“Drones have either been used as the ‘poor man’s aviation’ in Yemen or Libya, or on all the short front lines, such as in Upper-Karabakh, really very different contexts.”

After a nearly 30-year-long ceasefire, hostilities between the Western Saharan independence movement Polisario and Morocco resumed mid-November, following the deployment of Moroccan troops in the far south of Western Sahara, to tackle a group of separatists who were blocking the only route out towards West Africa, which they consider as illegal.

To date, all attempts to settle the conflict have failed.

Rabat, which controls nearly 80 percent of Western Sahara, a vast desert territory where Morocco has, in recent years, set up some major development sites, has put forward a proposal for autonomy, under its sovereignty.

The Polisario Front, in turn, is calling for a referendum on self-determination under the auspices of the United Nations, which was included in the terms of the ceasefire signed between Morocco and the Western Saharan movement in September 1991.
 
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Morocco and Algeria share ethnicity, history, language, culture, religion and should live as brothers. Unfortunately Morocco has dreams of Greater Morocco claiming lands of the neighboring states. Morocco invaded Algeria after it's independence in 1963 claiming few Algerian provinces. I think Morocco has to give up their dreams of Greater Morocco.

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Both are Islamic countries, they need to let go of their differences and make Peace, make your Nabi SAW proud.
 
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Wing loong II Deal for Algeria include 3-5 CH-6 Price tag USD 25 Million for each CH-6 as first client for CH-6
 
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Morocco and Algeria share ethnicity, history, language, culture, religion and should live as brothers. Unfortunately Morocco has dreams of Greater Morocco claiming lands of the neighboring states. Morocco invaded Algeria after it's independence in 1963 claiming few Algerian provinces. I think Morocco has to give up their dreams of Greater Morocco.

View attachment 781189

This is a very old Moroccan map..That is false history in your post.. as Algeria is the one who attacked Morocco in what is called the sand war.. This is the official history on the net ..


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The problem of the southern border between Morocco and Algeria arose in 1950 when the French colonial authorities annexed the regions of Tindouf and Bechar to Algerian territory, while Morocco demanded the return of the two regions after its independence in 1956.

Paris did not heed the Moroccan demands, and in 1957 took the initiative to approve a new administrative system for the Sahara, and suggested that Morocco start negotiations to resolve the border problem.

However, King Mohammed V rejected the French offer, stressing that the border problem would be resolved with the Algerian authorities after Algeria's independence from France.

On July 6, 1961, Rabat signed an agreement with Ferhat Abbas, head of the interim government of the Algerian Republic, recognizing the existence of a border problem between the two countries, and stipulating the need to start negotiations to resolve it immediately upon Algeria's independence.

France wanted from behind its proposal to stop Morocco's continuous support for the Algerian revolution, as it was hosting the leaders of the revolution, especially in the city of Oujda in the east of the country, and Rabat was providing arms supplies to the revolutionaries, which was disturbing the French occupation.

After the revolutionaries of Algeria succeeded in expelling the French occupation and declaring the country's independence in 1962, Ahmed Ben Bella, the first president of Algeria, took the initiative to confirm that the Algerian territory is an integral part.

King Hassan II - who succeeded his father in power after his death in 1961 - made his first visit to Algeria on March 13, 1963, where he reminded his Algerian counterpart Ben Bella of the agreement signed with the Algerian interim government on setting the borders between the two countries created by French colonialism.

The late royal advisor Abdelhadi Boutaleb, who accompanied Hassan II on that visit, confirms that President Ben Bella asked the King of Morocco to postpone the discussion of the matter until the completion of building the institutions of the modern state.

But soon a media war broke out between Morocco and Algeria, which said that Rabat had expansionist intentions, while Morocco saw the Algerian accusations backed by the media by Nasserist Egypt, which is looking for an extension in the Maghreb region, as elements of concern that threaten the country's unity.

After that, events developed rapidly. On October 8, 1963, elements of the Algerian forces launched an attack on the Hassi Beida area, in which ten members of the Moroccan army located in the town's military center were killed.

Rabat then rushed to send more than one official delegation to the Algerian President Ben Bella to protest against that attack and other attacks that Rabat accused Algerian parties of carrying out on border areas in the south and north, including Tingub and Ish.

The two sides reached a dead end, the doors of negotiation and diplomatic work were closed, and war broke out in October 1963, and lasted for a few days before the fighting stopped on November 5, 1963, as the efforts of the League of Arab States and the Organization of African Unity succeeded in signing a final agreement for a ceasefire on February 20, 1964.


Algeria is contracting itself too much:

Algerian system: "Morocco is a normalized enemy with the Zionists and is plotting against Algeria.”

Algerian system: “Morocco is a brother that we must sit down for dialogue with, to serve the interests of our two peoples.”
 
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View attachment 781192

Wing loong II Deal for Algeria include 3-5 CH-6 Price tag USD 25 Million for each CH-6 as first client for CH-6

Morocco has the MQ-9B SeaGuardian.. obviously Algeria will attempt to counter it with Chinese drones..

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Morocco has dangerous weapons but doesn't want to fight Algeria.. it is really wiser ..

Example:



An Israeli nuclear submarine nicknamed "Doomsday" crossed the Strait of Gibraltar yesterday, according to Moroccan media.

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The Israeli submarine has landed on the northern coasts of Morocco, according to the same sources.
The reasons for this visit were not determined, while pictures of the submarine and its crew were transmitted on one of the Moroccan coasts.

https://www.afrigatenews.net/article/غواصة-إسرائيلية-نووية-تحط-الرحال-شمال-المغرب/


"Doomsday" .. HaHaHa!
 
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Both are Islamic countries, they need to let go of their differences and make Peace, make your Nabi SAW proud.

Seriously, do you think something is possible with this monarchy ? Not a reliable neighbor... Treachery, deceit and cheap strikes since the dawn of independence... In a perfect world I agree with you, but in reality it is something else. A country that does not even want to recognize your borders .. What do you want to do with it? And again, Algeria was somewhat fraternal with them
 
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After reading this I will never believe any Algerian or pro-Algerian bad talk about Morocco..

King Mohammed V's support for the Algerian cause did not stop at statements, denunciations, and evoking Arab, Islamic and human feelings, but besides that, he met and embraced the leaders of the Algerian revolution, provided the revolution with weapons, and received the mujahideen and politicians, and he had a great role in the success of the Algerian revolution.

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Under the direction of King Mohammed V, the Moroccan forces opened the borders to the Algerian Mujahideen, and made their lands a field for their training..

On February 6, 1957, King Mohammed V met with a delegation from the Algerian Liberation Front in Madrid, who had attended his reception, led by Ahmed Tawfiq al-Madani, and greeted him with a warm greeting. On the second day, the King met with the Algerian leaders in front of the Western press, and the Moroccan newspapers wrote in their readings: "The King received a delegation from the Algerian Liberation Front, headed by Tawfiq Al-Madani, who is one of the most skilled fighters for the Algerian cause."

After the king’s dialogue with them, he affirmed that whatever the circumstances, he is with Algeria, its people and its revolution. The mujahid stand, not the supporter, and that the revolution’s weapon roams freely in Morocco, and that the treatment between Algerians and Moroccans is constantly on the rug of love and harmony..

Ahmed Tawfiq Al-Madani said that the meeting with the king resulted in unlimited support for the front in Algeria. After welcoming the king, he assured them that he is a partner in brotherhood, jihad and the just Algerian cause, and he responded to rumors broadcast by French colonial channels that Morocco will not stop the legitimate support for the Algerian revolution.

After talking about the ship loaded with weapons and supplies in Tangier, the royal response was that it would be in the hands of the revolutionaries by saying: "I do not return you a request, so that the blessed brother contacts me by his well-known means and I will complete the required price for him, with my special participation in the jihad." The king fulfilled his promise, and that was a qualitative participation in that stage in the history of the Algerian revolution.

Under the direction of King Mohammed V, the Moroccan forces opened the borders to the Algerian Mujahideen, and made its lands a field for their training, and some of its cities as rear bases for the revolution. This great support increased the strength of the revolution, and even dispersed the plans of the French, who began to weaken in front of the border attacks of the revolutionaries.

As a result of the strategic support of the Moroccan monarch, the leadership of the Algerian revolution has been active in developing plans and forming networks that take charge of obtaining arms from Europe and delivering them to the western region of the country through the Far Morocco.

Weapons through Moroccan soil: the use of boxes of vegetables and fruits, after they were unloaded, they were filled with military ammunition, as well as pottery vessels that were brought in the city of Fez and filled with ammunition, from which they entered the Algerian soil, in addition to car fuel tanks that were also loaded with weapons and passed across the border to Algeria.

During the stages of Moroccan support for the Algerian revolution, about five hundred Moroccan volunteers from the city of Marrakesh were placed at the disposal of the National Liberation Army by order of Moroccan King Mohammed V, who issued an early order allowing the passage of military equipment and even foreign volunteers to Algeria, and the Moroccan authorities also allowed the people to demonstrate In support of the cause of Algeria to reach freedom and independence.

Morocco, at the time of King Mohammed V, also formed safe medical places for injured Algerian revolutionaries to receive treatment in the stages of the tightening of the noose on the border states. In front of this support for the revolution and the facilities provided to its men; France has submitted formal complaints to the UN Security Council, has also planted mines and electrified wires along the border, and intensified guard patrols throughout the day and night, but this did not prevent the Mujahideen from continuing their operations from their rear bases in Morocco.

By 1960, King Mohammed V of Morocco received an Algerian government delegation in Marrakesh, who presented to him the harassment that the Algerians were receiving from the French consuls in Oujda and Bouarfa. So the King responded to the delegation’s request and closed the two consulates directly, and this is what prompted the head of the Algerian interim government, Mr. Farhat Abbas to visit Rabat, where he declared: "Algeria is Morocco, and our solidarity is eternal, and the Sahara is a matter that concerns Algeria and Morocco only, and it does not matter from far or near the French colonialism."

Thus, Morocco, the government and people during the reign of Moroccan King Mohammed V, played a great role in supporting the cause of the Algerian people, standing up to their plight and supporting them materially and morally. This support never stopped despite the plots of the French and the spreading of grudges between the two parties. Algeria won its independence with the support of its Moroccan brothers in 1962.
 
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We respect Mohammed V even there is a street in algiers with his name However his son hassan 2 was a bad man it because of him that we are in this situation.
 
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Blaming others won't do any good to the Algerian.. the big problems are internal ..

10 000 Algerian migrants arrived on the Spanish shores only during the month of September

Source: CIPIMD

Citizens of a petroleum country emigrating? doesn't it say it all? .. That there is something illogical and strange about it?
 
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