Dronification of the conflict in Western Sahara.
Tehran will help the Polisario by delivering drones to wage war. For Rabat, it is a “red line”.
On April 8, 2021, it was rumored (and reported by AFP) that Morocco had launched its first ever drone strike, that killed the Polisario police chief / commander of the national gendarmerie, Addah al-Bendir in Tifariti, an oasis town in the North-eastern part of Western Sahara.
The strike was thought to be conducted by Harop suicide drones from Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) which the sale of such drones to Morocco was reported by Haaretz in November 2021. Prior to this, Morocco was only known to possess the old Israeli Heron drones bought in 2014 for $50 million.
This prompted the Polisario Front to speed up their acquisition of their own arsenal of drones from “friends”, that had already started since the fall out between Morocco and Iran after the allegedly military support provided by Iranian-backed Hezbollah for the Polisario Front.
During an interview during the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic’s Minister of the Interior (a country proclaimed by the Polisario Front, that is a full member in the African Union), Oman Mansour visit to Mauritania, he revealed that the Polisario will soon be acquiring military drones with differing offensive capabilities in their war against the “Moroccan occupational force”.
This prompted escalated threats from Morocco, when Omar Hilale, Morocco’s ambassador to the United Nations, threatened that Morocco will react in “an appropriate military response” if Iranian drones are found to reach the hands of their enemies in the Western Sahara.
Citing that the presence of Iranian drones in hands of the Polisario Front, which would be a game-changer “at the military level”.
This threat came after the Moroccan Foreign Minister, Nasser Bourita’s public accusation of Iran during a joint press conference with his Yemeni counterpart on 5th October 2022, for sponsoring terrorism in the Arab World – referring to Yemen and Western Sahara
“Iran is currently the official sponsor of separatism and terrorism in our Arab region,”
Nasser Bourita, Morocco’s Foreign Minister
Iran has vaguely denied this assertion, instead advising Morocco’s Foreign Minister to “instead of seeking help from the Zionist regime to impose its demands on the region, pave the ground for self-determination by the people of Western Sahara.”