Algeria’s government is pushing forward a draft law to strengthen the country’s military mobilization structure, in a move seen as a response to rising tensions with Morocco, Mali, and former colonial power France.
The legislation, which is set to be presented today, April 30 by the Minister of Justice, was approved earlier this month by Algeria’s council of ministers.
The proposed bill aims “to define the provisions for organizing, preparing and carrying out the general mobilization provided for in Article 99 of the Constitution,” granting the government authority to rally all national resources in the event of a major crisis.
This legal initiative comes as Algeria’s top military commander, General Said Changriha, makes high-profile visits to border regions, inspecting military units and overseeing exercises amid a climate of regional instability. Algeria, home to one of Africa’s largest armies, has taken an increasingly assertive defense posture.
The latest sign of escalation came earlier this month, when Algeria announced that it had shot down a military drone near its border with Mali. It marked the first such incident between the two Sahelian nations, each governing a vast stretch of the Sahara Desert.
The downing of the drone sent a strong signal of Algeria’s willingness to act decisively on security breaches, especially as instability continues to radiate from northern Mali following the withdrawal of French troops and the weakening of the UN peacekeeping mission.
“I did not understand what’s behind this project,” wrote Aziza Sahoui, a retired teacher, on social media. “I’m really worried, especially as it comes after the incursion of a Malian drone into our territory.” Her concern mirrors the unease of many Algerians uncertain about what expanded military mobilization could signal.
Relations with France, once Algeria’s key defense partner, have also grown increasingly fraught. The diplomatic chill intensified last year after France threw its support behind Morocco’s autonomy plan for Western Sahara — a region at the heart of a decades-long dispute. Morocco’s claim over Western Sahara is contested by the Polisario Front, a pro-independence movement based in refugee camps in southeastern Algeria and backed by Algiers.
Algeria, which maintains its support for Sahrawi self-determination, viewed France’s policy shift as a betrayal. The move strained an already delicate relationship and added to a growing list of grievances between Algiers and Paris. The two countries’ ties have further deteriorated over the years, driven by disagreements over migration, colonial memory, and regional geopolitics.
Algeria’s Tensions With Neighbors Fuel Concerns
The friction between Morocco and Algeria has deep historical roots. Their enmity dates back to the 1963 Sand War — a border conflict triggered by disputes over resource-rich areas like Tindouf and Béchar, which Morocco claimed under its “Greater Morocco” ideology. Algeria, newly independent at the time, saw such claims as a threat to its territorial integrity.
The Western Sahara conflict exacerbated the split. In 1975, Morocco annexed the territory following Spain’s withdrawal, triggering a war with the Polisario Front. When Algeria recognized the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic in 1976, Morocco severed diplomatic ties.
Although tensions thawed slightly in the late 1980s, a 1994 incident, in which Morocco accused Algerians of involvement in a terrorist attack in Marrakesh, led to the closure of their shared border, separating families and hindering trade.
In 2021, Algeria officially cut diplomatic relations with Morocco, citing “hostile actions,” including Morocco’s normalization of relations with Israel and allegations of espionage. Then, in 2025, Algeria accused Morocco of targeting civilians in a Polisario-controlled zone, further inflaming hostilities.
This prolonged standoff has paralyzed regional cooperation, especially within the Arab Maghreb Union — a bloc founded in 1989 to foster economic integration but largely inactive since 1996 due to persistent rivalries. Despite shared language, religion, and culture, Morocco and Algeria remain entangled in cycles of mistrust and confrontation.
As such, Algeria’s push for a general mobilization law underscores growing fears of escalation, even as many citizens voice anxiety over its implications.
READ ALSO: Sherifa Calls for Respect for Ghana’s Creative Legends