It is no longer a novelty that
Pedro Sánchez
sells the skin of the bear before hunting it.
Thus, after his trip to Rabat, he promised the rapid reopening of the border crossings of
Ceuta
and
Melilla
and with fuss he congratulated himself on an agreement with the Moroccan king that he did not hesitate to call a "historical milestone".
All to justify the
swerve regarding Western Sahara
and surrender to the demands of
Mohamed VI
, regardless of international law or UN resolutions.
Well, for now the reopening of the land borders of the two autonomous cities will have to wait at least another 15 days.
And this is because our neighbor to the south does not seem willing to accept the requests of the Sanchista government, which was believed to have deceived the cunning Alaouite monarch by making him tacitly recognize Spanish sovereignty with the reopening of the Melilla commercial customs, unilaterally closed by Morocco. in 2018, and the creation of Ceuta.
The reality is that, no matter how much Mohamed VI has wrested the great Saharawi asset from a kneeling Sánchez, he is not going to give up his
destabilizing daydreams about the two North African squares
.
And the stumbling blocks on the reopening of the border confirm the weakness of an agreement about which little is known, presumably because few things are tied, once again denying Moncloa.
The harmony between Spain and Morocco is key to our interests.
But it must be based on
loyalty
and
mutual
respect .
Not in a desperate attempt by Sánchez to make himself forgive his mistakes by the Moroccan king, who is taking advantage of the weakness of the tenant of La Moncloa.
In fact, at the moment Rabat's only gestures have been those related to his interest in
oil exploration that poses a great threat to the Canary Islands
in the midst of a struggle for sovereignty over Atlantic waters.
Furthermore, bilateral relations with a government in Spain in which ministers such as Garzón
from Zangolo are unlikely to normalize
they allow themselves to disavow the president himself, as he has done by meeting this week with
Polisario
leaders , before whom he criticized Sánchez's "tactical games".
In something as serious as international politics there is no room for these discrepancies within the Executive that so damage the image of our country.
The frivolity and lack of vision of the State in Moncloa is costing us too dearly.
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Morocco
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Occidental Sahara
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