The Jerusalem Post

Hezbollah accuses Morocco of caving in to pressure, after it cuts ties with Iran

Rabat says Tehran and Hezbollah provide weapons and financial support to the separatist Polisario Front

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Hezbollah accused Morocco of caving in to pressure from the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia, after it cut ties with Iran over alleged weapons smuggling to the separatist Polisario Front in neighborin­g Algeria.

On Tuesday night Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita told reporters that Rabat had obtained “verified proof” that Hezbollah had provided training and financial support to the Polisario Front since 2016 and had sent weaponry to the group last month.

“Hezbollah sent [surfaceto-air] SAM-9, SAM-11 and Strela missiles to the Polisario with the connivance of Iran’s embassy in Algiers,” he was quoted by local press as saying.

According to Bourita, Morocco’s ambassador in Iran had already left Tehran, and the Iranian Embassy in the kingdom would be closed “immediatel­y,” in response to “Iran’s involvemen­t, through Hezbollah, in allying itself with the Polisario over the past two years in order to target the security and higher interests of Morocco.”

Bourita, who announced the move after returning from Tehran, was quoted by The Washington Post as saying that he had met with Iran’s Foreign Minister Muhammad Javad Zarif and “presented him with all the reasons that induced this decision. I have showed him the dates, locations of meetings and the names involved.”

In response Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qassemi on Wednesday denied the claims made by Rabat, saying at a press conference in Tehran that they were unfounded and incorrect.

“Noninterfe­rence in other countries’ internal affairs is and will remain one of the most important principles of Iran foreign policy. Remarks attributed to the foreign minister of Morocco about cooperatio­n between an Iranian diplomat and the Polisario Front in Western Sahara are false,” he was quoted by Iran’s Mehr news agency as saying.

Spain relinquish­ed control of Western Sahara in 1975, and claims to the territory led to Morocco and the Polisario fighting for its control until 1991, when Rabat took control of 90% of the desert territory before a UN-brokered ceasefire.

Split in two with a UN mission monitoring the cease-fire, Morocco considers Western Sahara as an integral part of its country, whereas the Polisario Front insists on a UN referendum on its independen­ce for the Sahrawi people.

According to the Polisario Front’s website Hespress, the Front’s spokesman Muhammad Haddad denied Morocco’s accusation­s, saying: “Through these maneuvers and accusation­s, Rabat seeks to refrain from negotiatio­n on the desert, which the United Nations has called for.”

Israeli officials have been concerned about the threat posed by Iran’s “Shi’ite crescent,” which, in addition to a worrisome land bridge from Iran to Lebanon via Iraq and Syria, also includes Yemen, where Houthi militias (supported by Tehran) have been fighting against the armies of Saudi Arabia and several Gulf countries.

The addition of Iran and Hezbollah’s presence in the North African country is an additional concern for Israel, which, while it has not had any formal relations with Morocco since the Second Intifada in 2000, has many citizens who visit the kingdom.

A senior Israeli diplomatic official on Tuesday stated that Iran’s influence in the Middle East has increased dramatical­ly since the Iranian nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action.

“The lifting of the sanctions has allowed Iran to conquer the region,” he said.

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