The Arab Maghreb Union was set up 35 years ago amid high hopes that it would help usher in a new era of economic and political cooperation.
It was seen as a potential beacon of progress in the region and had significant popular backing, with the potential to extend the region’s influence across the Arab world and beyond.
But now, those hopes are dashed.
The AMU’s anniversary comes at a bleak time for North Africa, which is struggling with some of the most challenging conditions in six decades. Its bright potential has faded into obscurity as an entire generation knows little about the organisation or its aims.
The five-nation bloc has lost sight of its broader founding motivations, including boosting economic development and meeting environmental challenges. Such goals among member states Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, and Mauritania seem increasingly remote.
Home to over 100 million people and covering 6 million square kilometres, the AMU is caught in a regional decline back toward the polarisations of old. Tensions it once hoped to allay have since been amplified by media wars.
A range of continental and international issues have been involved, most seriously the stubborn territorial dispute over Western Sahara between the region’s two most significant powers, Algeria and Morocco.
But they are not alone in this respect.
Differing viewpoints and politics among AMU governments have contributed to a lack of trust. There has been a return to nationalism as countries seek to one-up each other and view neighbours as threats rather than partners.
Read more: Leaked directive reveals depths of Algeria and Morocco’s ‘port war’
Hardening rhetoric
Halting any further deterioration toward open confrontation between Algeria and Morocco – known as “the enemy brothers” – is now the foremost geopolitical ambition for the region and a symbol of the Maghreb’s shrunken hope and the world’s deeper geopolitical turmoil.
Relations between them have deteriorated dramatically – and abruptly – over the past five years since the overthrow of Algeria’s late president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, in 2019.
Within a year of taking power, the new military rulers cut diplomatic relations with Rabat, stopped the Maghreb-Europe gas pipeline project, and banned Moroccan commercial aircraft from Algerian airspace.
It accused the former president and his regime of being responsible for a decline in Algeria’s national status by “reducing hostility towards Morocco for two decades, which allowed Rabat to achieve diplomatic, economic, and development gains,” according to media statements by Lieutenant General Said Chengriha, chief of staff of the Algerian People’s National Army.
This return to the hostile language of the 1960s echoed throughout the entire region, stoking fears of darker days ahead.
It is already suffering from an intermittent civil war in Libya and the near-collapse of Tunisia’s economy, where there is also a parallel political crisis as both countries grapple with the fallout from the Arab Spring.
It all leaves the AMU’s heyday looking remote, but the feeling of positivity it once encapsulated does not date back too far, even with the region’s current conditions providing such a sharp contrast.