Complex with Morocco reveals depth of Algerian crisis

Puesto fronterizo entre Argelia y Marruecos

The time has come to put an end to this falsification of history, especially because Algerians deserve a better system and a return to normality where questions can be raised about the reason that made Algeria captive to oil and gas revenues.

The vulgar campaign of the Algerian regime against Morocco, its king, kingdom and people, is nothing but a flagrant expression of the depth of the crisis in which this regime lives. The Algerian internal crisis, which made the regime lose its nerve, can be summed up in the impossibility of carrying out a reflection with a minimum of audacity including an objective assessment of the causes that led Algeria to the precarious state in which it found itself. Algeria never lacked what could have made it a successful country since its independence in 1962. Since the military coup of 1965, a coup led by Houari Boumediene, all the complexes were created that continue to this day, including the Moroccan complex.
What may benefit the Algerian regime is the very reconciliation with Algeria and Algerians first, rather than pursuing the policy of escaping abroad to avoid dealing with internal problems. The flight abroad largely reflects and confirms the depth of the crisis in which a regime that has long since expired is living. The regime seeks to rehabilitate itself, without knowing that this is impossible. The Algerian regime has become a bankrupt merchant looking through its old notebooks in the hope of finding in them what will allow it to catch its breath. This explains why the former head of Military Intelligence, General Mohamed Meddin (Tawfiq), was released from prison and allowed General Khaled Nizar, former Minister of Defense, to return from exile in Spain and stop all prosecutions against him. The two belong to another era when holding Morocco's neighbor responsible for the Algerian failure was a way out of a system that believed it was possible to treat cancer with circulating drugs for headaches that did not require a doctor's prescription.

Presidente de Argelia, Abdelmadjid Teboune .

From time to time a little courage is needed. Courage means saying that Algeria has no problem with Morocco. All there is is an Algerian aggression against Morocco by fabricating a cause called Sahara. Well, Morocco has won the military and diplomatic war that Algeria has been waging against it since 1975, through a tool called "Polisario Front". Morocco has obtained U.S. recognition of the Moroccan Sahara. Such recognition is a dedication to a reality that was best expressed by the late King Hassan II, who once said: "We do not want the world to recognize the Moroccan character of the Sahara, because we are in our Sahara. Rather, we want the world to know who are the neighbors whom God has put next to us."
The Algerian system was supposed to enjoy a minimum of sportsmanship in its dealings with Morocco, which knew how to make great strides in the field of development or in the field of the consecration of its territorial integrity. Everything that King Mohammed VI has done over the past 21 years has been aimed at improving the situation of Moroccan citizens and making them more attached to their country. Perhaps what scares the Algerian regime the most is the reopening of the borders with Morocco, which have been closed since 1994. Why is that feared despite all the calls for cooperation and understanding from Mohammed VI? The reason is clear. The reason is the regime's fear that Algerian citizens might see what has been achieved in Morocco, despite its lack of natural wealth.

Frontera entre Marruecos y Argelia

A return to the recent past is enough to ensure that the Algerian people will seek the military security system. The Algerian people stopped the farce, which was the nomination of the handicapped Abdelaziz Bouteflika for a fifth presidential term. Bouteflika was forced to resign shortly before the end of his fourth term. It was the Algerian people who imposed the resignation after a movement that lasted for several months. The military reaped the fruits of Bouteflika's overthrow and used it to their advantage after Ahmed Gaid Salah, head of the army at the time, played the required role. The time has come to put an end to this falsification of history and events, especially since Algerians deserve a better system and a better future. The first thing they deserve is for their country to return to being a normal country, where one can ask why Algeria was captive to oil and gas revenues for so many years. Why did its economy not develop? Why the failure of all the "revolutions" the regime undertook, from Arabization to agriculture to heavy industry in which it invested billions of dollars without making any effort to know where what Algerian factories produced was being spent.
More than that, the regime imposed Arabization on Algerians, meaning that their education must be in Arabic and signs must be in Arabic. Algerians forgot French and learned Arabic from the semi-literate Muslim and Baathist brothers, imported by Algeria from Egypt, Syria and Iraq ...
Since independence, the Algerian regime has focused on many things, less on the welfare of Algerians, who have the right to ask where the oil and gas money has gone and why no other wealth, such as tourism or light industries, for example, has been developed.
Algeria intervened on all issues. Big slogans were raised along the lines of the right to free self-determination of peoples. It intervened the most in the Palestinian case, but it did the Palestinians no good, except for harboring the terrorist group of "Abu Nidal", a group that killed the best Palestinian diplomats, such as Saeed Hamami, Ezz Al-Din Qalqur, Na`im Khadr and others, which was considered a success.
Algeria deserves better than the existing system, especially since the best wealth it has not invested in is human wealth. The battle of Algeria is within Algeria, not with Morocco, which was the first to help Algeria and tried to support stability in Algeria, with all kinds of aids, at the outbreak of the popular uprising in October 1988 during the era of Chadli Bendjedid.
Once again, it is time for the Algerian regime to get rid of the Moroccan complex. Hostility towards Morocco will not help it in any way. This hostility reveals how deeply rooted Morocco is in some Algerian souls. If we take the history of the relationship between the two countries, during the Algerian War of Independence, as Abdelaziz Bouteflika and others were from around Boumediene in Oujda, Morocco, logic dictates the establishment of the best relations between the two countries. Morocco's support for the Algerians during the War of Independence should mean that Algeria should rejoice at the consecration of the Moroccan Sahara, rather than the regime unleashing the most outrageous attacks worthy only of a son of the street who lost his temper.