Peace & Stability Journal Special 25th Anniversary Edition | Page 24

Introduction Since Spain’s cessation from Western Sahara in 1975, the King- dom of Morocco and the Polisario Front (the leadership of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), has been locked in conflict for the past five decades of a seemingly irreconcilable stalemate. The Polisario initiated an insurgency with Morocco in 1991, leading to a United Nations (UN)-sponsored ceasefire resolution in 1993 to peacefully resolve the conflict. The resolu- tion has not been fully enacted, leaving the conflict stalemated and unresolved. Western Sahara is the only territory on the UN’s list of non-self-governing territories without a recognized adminis- trating country. 1 The conflict is in an armed deadlock, currently monitored by the UN’s Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (known by its French acronym MINURSO). 2 In 2007, Morocco proposed a Western Sahara autonomy plan that the United States (US) called “serious, credible, and realistic,” 3 but which the Polisario outright rejected, instead wanting “nothing short of total independence.” 4 This scenario is poised to upset regional stability in Western Sahara and northwest Africa. If the UN were to not renew MINURSO’s mandate, and withdraw UN peacekeepers, then Morocco and the Polisario would be left to resolve the conflict without UN assistance. If this were to happen, it could adversely affect several US regional strategic objectives in northwestern Africa, such as maintaining political and regional stability. This article first describes how the Kingdom of Morocco fits into US northwestern African regional political and security goals, and summarizes the United State’s policy toward the conflict. Lastly, this article touches upon the possible effects to the Polisario, Morocco, and the US if the UN does not renew MINURSO’s mandate, and withdraws its peacekeepers. Background of Conflict Following Spain cessation of administrative control of Western Sahara in 1975, Morocco and the recently formed Polisario Front violently clashed over who would take Spain’s place. Mo- rocco ultimately ended the conflict by expelling the Polisario and their Sahrawi supporters who fled to western Algeria, where they remain today, living in Algerian-sponsored refugee camps. Morocco went a step further, building a 1,700 mile long, 30 foot high wall of sand and rocks, referred to as ‘the Berm,’ sepa- rating the western 70 percent of Western Sahara under Moroc- can control from the remaining portion of the territory in the east controlled by the Polisario. The headquarters of MINURSO in Laayoune. 22