SA MUST JOIN US, MOROCCO AND OTHERS IN SECURING WESTERN SAHARA PEACE DEAL

Sahrawi women of western sahara wave the flag - AP

The Trump administration is moving with turbo-charged speed to settle the Western Sahara conflict.

In that expeditious US adventure, there is bound to be winners and losers. South Africa, a long-standing backer of the Western Sahara people’s fight for independence, appears to be caught between a rock and a hard place.

SA has historically aligned herself with Algeria on the issue of Western Sahara, with both countries believing that the international recognition of a Western Sahara independence from Morocco would be the ultimate prize. Other nations engrossed in the Western Sahara issue can be found around the Sahel region. Mauritania is a key stakeholder in the conflict. Although my primary objective is to shine the torch on SA’s very public conundrum that is the future of the Western Sahara, methinks context is key.

When the colonial power that was Spain finally withdrew from Morocco in 1976 following a protracted rebellion, Western Sahara was left partitioned between Morocco and Mauritania. The pro-independence Polisario Front, a guerrilla movement for the Western Sahara people, rebelled against this post-colonial settlement. Three years later, in 1979, Mauritania withdrew, leaving the conflict as a matter primarily between Morocco and the territory of Western Sahara.

There was a 29-year-old ceasefire, from 1991-2020. The resumption of hostilities was led by the Polisario Front that accused Morocco of breaking the terms of the ceasefire.

If truth be told, the international community has been unable to end this conflict. Through it all, Morocco has remained steadfast that Western Saharan people are Moroccan. African continental organization, the AU, has attempted without much success to end the conflict.

Polisario Front Soldiers march in formation, holding the Western Sahara flag [Image: Jamestown]

Enter Trump, Donald Trump, the 47th US president who is determined to waste no further time in finally settling the conflict. Indeed, he might well be motivated by a personal desire for a Nobel Peace Prize, but that’s a discussion for some other time.

With Trump seemingly in the pound seat, some drastic movement is underway to end the decades-old conflict. Instead of “independence”, the Western Saharan people have been convinced to choose “autonomy” or self-rule, within the jurisdiction of the authority of the Kingdom of Morocco.

This means Western Sahara will remain an integral part of Morocco, using Moroccan currency, flag and having no separate army.

In an atmosphere of war-fatigue, all sides appear to have endorsed a Moroccan-led peace deal brokered by the Trump administration. Mauritania is on board, and so is Algeria, historically seen as a major backer of the Polisario Front. Bilateral ties between Algeria and SA have been very sound over the years, buoyed in part by their unflinching support for Western Sahara.

When the US Security Council passed Resolution 2797 in October 2025, paving a way for the imminent truce to be signed, nations such as SA were caught flat-footed, particularly by the Polisario Front’s compromise on its long-standing rigid stance on independence.

The Western Saharan (Sahrawi) people demonstrating, demanding the right to carry out their overdue referendum for self-determination. [Image: Accord]

Additionally, the almost discreet change-of-tune by Algeria, which gave its full support to Resolution 2797, appeared to have isolated SA as a notable, singular most backer of Western Sahara. SA’s voice on the rapidly unfolding developments has been somewhat muted, or lukewarm.

SA’s foreign policy is premised on the ethos of the UN Charter, which espouses multilateralism. Conflict resolution through dialogue, and not the barrel of a gun, is what Pretoria famously preaches.

Although Pretoria was disappointed by the key contents of Resolution 2797, particularly in offering Western Sahara conditional autonomy as opposed to full independence, the Ramaphosa administration has nonetheless expressed support for the peace process publicly.

And President Trump wants the peace deal to be signed by end of March 2026. Using a carrot and stick approach, the Trump administration this week piled untold pressure on Algeria to support to the deal. During this week’s Senate hearing on counterterrorism, Senator Ted Cruz criticised administration officials for repeatedly avoiding any direct reference to the Polisario Front, which is accused of “terror activities that destabilize the region”.

Senator Cruz’s message to the Polisario Front was stark. He threatened to initiate a process in Congress aimed at classifying the liberation movement as a terrorist group “unless they change their ways.”

US Senator Ted Cruz, this week during the US Senate, threatened to initiate a process in Congress aimed at classifying the Polisario Front liberation movement as a terrorist group “unless they change their ways.” [Image: YAF]

Algeria was also caught in the tongue lashing. The country faces US sanctions following their purchase of military equipment from Russia, which is under US and Western sanctions.

It appears that under the circumstances, Algeria’s get-out-of-jail card appears to be attaching a signature to end the Western Sahara conflict as demanded by Washington.

South Africa is not out of the woods, either. When it comes to bilateral relations with the US, SA seems to constantly skate on thin ice. Developments in the Sahel region, particularly Western Sahara, have left Pretoria in a spot of bother, even though no one in DIRCO would dare agree in public.

Western Sahara is moving with speed toward what Morocco has always proffered. Algeria and Mauritania are finally on board. The UN Security Council Resolution 2797 is intact. Pretoria, with very little or no room to manoeuvre, can only publicly endorse the peace process as is. Anything else will be tantamount to stepping on the tail of a lion.

My suggestion to the Presidency and DIRCO would be to engage closer with the Polisario Front so that Pretoria may offer some assistance to the Western Sahara project as it enters a rebooting phase.

Sahrawi protesters wave their flags during a rally, in support of Brahim Ghali, leader of the Polisario Front and for a free Sahara. [Image: Concha Beach, San Sebastian, northern Spain | AP]

Failure to do so would result in SA’s isolation from the mainstream talks and deny the Ramaphosa administration and the ANC a chance to lend a reputable steady hand at the negotiating table. Pretoria’s scope of influence would shrink drastically. International and continental impact would wane quite expeditiously. To roll up sleeves and get set, ready and go is all SA can do. The horse has bolted. It is what it is.

Pretoria and Rabat will do well to iron out the rough spots in their bilateral relations. The two nations are important to the continent, but even more to each other. The ties between the two nations dates back to the dark days of apartheid when in 1962, Morocco opened its doors to Nelson Mandela to undergo clandestine military training by the Algerian National Liberation Front (FLN) at bases near Oujda and the Zegangan region in Morocco.

The Trump administration, I suspect, would be delighted to find SA sitting in the cold as the Western Sahara conflict is finally ended in March. Pretoria needs to be wiser than detractors. As they say, if you are not at the table, you are on the menu.

Moroccan King Hassan II (right) and SA’s First Democratic President Nelson Mandela (left) during his visit to Morocco in 1994. [Image: DR via Yabiladi]
Sahrawi Independence Protest, against the Spanish government’s support for Moroccan Autonomy Plan For Western Sahara (Madrid, Spain / 26 March 2022) [Image: Pierre-Philippe Marcou | AFP via Getty]

Abbey Makoe

Abbey Makoe is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief: Global South Media Network (GSMN)

Author

  • Abbey Makoe is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief: Global South Media Network (GSMN)

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