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Destabilizing Africa: Iranian Drones Menace Morocco


For decades the Islamic Republic of Iran has engaged in asymmetric confrontations with regional rivals across the Middle East, extending its influence through supporting foreign guerrilla groups with military hardware and training.

Over the last several years, Iran has been expanding and deepening its influence into a new area: Africa, most notably the Sahel and Maghreb. In countries such as Senegal, the Central African Republic, and Nigeria, Iran has been replicating its Middle East playbook by arming and training rebel Shiite groups.

In this way, Iran is gaining a foothold in a strategic and resource-rich area adjacent to vital Western shipping lanes in the Atlantic Ocean.

Drone Transfers Via Algeria

Iranian subversion could have the greatest geopolitical consequences in the Sahara region of northwest Africa. With its mounting support for state and non-state opponents of Morocco, Iran seeks to undermine a staunch Western ally that serves as a bedrock of stability in a troubled neighborhood.

The most acute concern for Morocco is the supply of Iranian attack drones to the Polisario Front. The guerrilla group has conducted a decades-long military struggle to detach the Western Sahara from Morocco, and the Front has enjoyed the sustained support of Algeria, Morocco’s regional rival and antagonist.

Morocco’s permanent representative to the United Nations, Omar Hilale, has repeatedly highlighted the drone transfers via Algeria and warned that Morocco will react in an “appropriate manner.”

However, Iranian subversion reaches deeper inside Morocco through its persistent campaign to radicalize and recruit disaffected members of the Kingdom’s Shiite minority.

Iran-Algeria Ties

Iran has long-established economic and military ties with Algeria, and Tehran has acknowledged its sale of military drones to Algiers. Completing the loop, Polisario’s former interior minister Omar Mansour boasted last year that the group was taking delivery of Iranian drones and would deploy them to target Moroccan security forces.

Senior Moroccan officials have detailed how Iran has been using its Lebanese proxy militia Hezbollah to provide military training and support to Polisario guerrillas based at the Tindouf refugee camp in Algeria. This support goes back to 2017 and has long irritated Rabat.

In May 2018, Morocco broke off diplomatic relations with Iran for the third time over its support for the Front. Upping the ante, Iran has recently deployed units of its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to Algeria to augment the training of Polisario fighters.

Speaking on background, Moroccan officials shared intelligence that revealed how Algeria has optimized little-used airstrips for drone operations. These airstrips are in desolate areas of Algeria close to the border with Morocco.

Moroccan officials have also tracked shipments of military hardware by air from Iran to unspecified countries in North Africa. These shipments, delivered to Polisario fighters via Algeria, included drones, radar equipment, and ballistic missile systems.

Regional Stability

Iran’s accreting support for Algeria and Polisario threatens not just Morocco, but also the stability of the broader region. Morocco has long been a strategic bulwark in North Africa, a moderate Islamic country with a fast-growing economy and deepening economic relationships with its fellow African countries.

These economic and political foundations underpin Morocco’s emergence as a dependable strategic nexus between the US/Europe and the entire African continent.

Iranian efforts to destabilize Morocco are congruent with Iran’s antagonism to Israel. Morocco-Israeli relations have been quickly warming across diplomatic, economic, and military spheres in the wake of the 2020 signing of the Abraham Accords.

The agreement formalized a decades-long unofficial cooperation between Morocco and Israel and underlined the centrality of the Kingdom to the US policy of strengthening ties with key strategic allies in the Middle East. The fact that the accords include two African countries (Morocco and Sudan) indicates the strategic importance Washington attaches to the continent.

The recent agreement by Saudi Arabia and Iran to normalize diplomatic relations may relieve pressure on some of the major friction points in the Middle East but is unlikely to temper Iranian expansionist activities in Africa.

Over the last few years, geopolitical discussions of Africa have focused on what the US and its European allies can or should be doing to counter Chinese and, to a lesser extent, Russian activities across the region.

It is Iran’s mounting policy of subversion in Africa — highlighted by the introduction of its military drones to the Sahara — that demands greater scrutiny.

Source: The Defense Post

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Ayham Abecassis

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