JPRS ID: 9385 NEAR EAST/NORTH AFRICA REPORT

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APPROVE~ FOR RELEASE= 2007/02/08= CIA-R~P82-00850R000300050005-8 ~ ' ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 FoR oFFic~A~, usE oNi,~~ JPRS L/9385 7 November 19~80 - / th Afri~a Re ort - Near East Nor p CFOUO 40/80) FB~$ FOREIGN BROADCAS~ INFORMATION SERVICE F'OR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 I NOTE JPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign ' newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from forzign-language sources are translated; those from English-~anguage sources are transcr.ibed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] ~ or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in pai�entheses were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of an item origi_nate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTFICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE O~~tLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/9385 ~ 7 November,1980 NEAR EAST/NORTH AFRICA REPORT (FOUO 40/80) - CONTENTS TUNISIA Restrictiona on Growth of Free Prese Reported (Souhayr Belhassen, Abdelazia Barouhi; JEUNE AFRIQUE, 24 Sep 80) 1 Problems of Migrant Workers Discussed ' ' (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 26 Sep 80) 4 - WESTERN SAHARA Morocco 5aid To Control More Terrain, POLISARIO To Control Propaganda (Abdelaziz Dahmani; JEUNE AFRIQUE, 24 Sep 80) 8 Briefa POLISARIO Gets Soviet Weapons 14 Mauritanian Prisonera of POLISARIO 14 _ a_ [III - NE & A- 121 F~UO] APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY TUNISIA RESTRICTIONS ON GROWTH OF FREE PRESS REPORTED Paris JEUNE AFRIQUE in French 24 Sep 80 pp 46, 4~ [Article by Souhayr Belhassen and Abdelazia Barouhi] [Text] Although there are important differences, the national pres~ from all ~ sides have accorded a favora~le prejudice to Prime Minister Mohamed Mzali for 5~onths. There is little difference between LA PRESSE, a pro-government daily, and the independent ESSABAH group (Arab language daily). Headlines, articles and editorials applaud the action of the government: liberation of political prisoners, elimination of some dubious party leaders. "It is no longer necesLary to follow Mr Mzali's rhythm of liberalization," stated the enraptured ESSABAH. "Mzali forges ahead," a headline in the 10 August issue of LE PHARE, the 8+amonth-old independent French language weekly. Somewhat regional and cultural at first, LE PHARE is also forging ahead, and remarkably, is supporting the "legitimate" UGTT. On the occasion of Aid (the end of Ramadan, 12 August), one of its journalists, who paid a visit to Mr Habib Achour in his closely guarded residence, reports the words of the ex-secretary general of the UGTT (Tunisian General Federation of Labor) in an article entitled "A Morning With Habib Achour" (24 August issue). - Doling Out The latter was addressing the members of his executive board and of the loyal unions. While recognizing the present i.mproved political atmosphere, he recommended that they: "Hold on." These are words which could have been interpreted as a challenge to the authorities at a time when difficult negotiations are straining to "normalize" the life of the affiliated trade unions. Thls issue wiZl not be put on sale, and LE PHARE has been suspended for 3 months by a court order. Officially, it ie .r_ot the 24 August issue that is under indictmen*_, ~out the - previous number (on sale for a week, since there was no preliminary censorship), - for publication of false news. Specifically, which was actually erroneous, news of the reception of the secretary general of OATUU (Organization of African Trade ~ Union Unity) by President Bourguiba. "This action must not be interpreted as putting the brakes on openness," an official source assured us. It is to avoid giving weapons to defenders of 1 FOR OFFTrTAT, USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 orthodox opiniun within the pSD [Destourian Socialist Party]. These party mem~ers would have exploited the article on Achour to demonstrate the "dangers" of democracy. It should also be noted that an issue of the satirical newspaper KOL CHAI BIL MAKCHOUF, published quite openly by the party, was also seized for "defamatory attacks." In all, one blow to the left, one blow to the right. Mohamed Mzali is categorical: "Freedom of the press must not be used against openness. Everyone must understand his rights and his duties." While profiting from the critical support of the PHARE, TUNIS HEBDO (independent) ~ and the liberal opposition newspapers ERRAI (OPINION) and DEMOCRACY, the Mzali goverrunent has paradoxically had more trouble from the party newspapers ~EL AMAL, 1'ACTION, DIALOGUE and LA PRESSE). Still in the hands of loyal followers of the ex-director of the P~D, Mr Mohamed Sayah, they only dole out certain news items. At the pnd of August, the management was turned over to young Destourian t~:chnocrats without any political past. As for the other political currents, since his nomination, Mr Mzali has proclaimed too loudly that the opposition press is urell-situated, since the birth of new headlines cannot be prevented. Already, Mr Ahmed Mestiri, leader of one wing of the Movement of socialist democrats, has obtained authorization, during the month , oC July, to publish two periodicals, 1'AVENIR and AL MOSTAKBAL--although it is still not known when they will appear. As for the organ of the PCT [Tunisian Communist Pa::�ty], it seems that it will not finally be authorized. It is said, "The comrusnists should be the last to claim the riglit to freedom of speech when it is known that they have it when they are in power." As for the Popuiar Unity Movement (MUP of former minister Ahmed Bsn Salah), on the other hand, the request presented in July 1978 by Mrs Brahim Hayder, wife of one of the leaders of the movement, is reviving a debate with~n the PSD. The "pros" stress that freedom of speech cannot be exclusive, and that there is nothing to be feared from her newspaper, JNITY. The "cons" bring up the past "antidemocratic" policy of the former minister. The Doctrine We tend to believe that the response will finally be positive. It is not out of the question that this is related to the issue of political contacts ~which would develop between tre friends of Ben Salah. and the regime (J.A. No. 1025). And the "integrationist" movement? It is said that it is taken for granted that its newspapers will reappear. "A contingency," it is said. The authorization would be on condition of the ending of the alignment of this group with Khomeyni's ideas. An alinemenC that caused the suspension of AL MOJTAMAA (the Society) in January 1980, although 1 month earlier the integrationists had requested - authori.zation to publish under a new title. The Ba'athists, who may also have intended to establish newspapers, apparently had no opportunity to do so. 2 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLX The doctrine that is emerging is one of authorizing only newspapers that give proof of independence, and those whose national characteristics are established. ' ~n this case, it is said, no matter what ideas are concerned, authorization comes "automatically." This is the official line of "progressive" establishment of "the democracy of speech," while awaiting "the democracy of organizations." COPYRIGHT: Jeune Afrique GRUPJIA 1980 9174 CSO: 4400 ~ 3 ~'OR OFF7~TAi. USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 TUNISIA PROBLEMS OF MIGRANT WORKERS DISCUSSED Paris MKRCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French 26 Sep 80 pp 2339, 2340 [Text] The 14th seminar ofTuni.sian workers abroad, which was held in Tunis in August and was opened by Pr.ime Minister Mohammed Mzali, has assumed special significance. On the one hand, general economic conditions make it desirable that enigrants receive technical ~raini,ng and eventually return to Tunisia to invest their savings. On the other hand, the open door policy inaugurated in Tunisia requires atrict loyalty on the par~ of the emigranta who, more than other groups, are subject to being diverted by the action of opposing Tunisian groups which have been establiahed abroad, particularly in France. The migrant workers generally complain of the atrictneas exhibited by Tuniaian customs that would interfere with importing of equipment that they intended to employ in Tunisia and of a lack c,f understanding by the government with regard to the plana that they intend to implemznt after returning to their country. Therefore, the seminar recommends, in addition to improvement of the services dealin~Z with repatriation of the workers, streamlining of government red tape and effecCive technical assistance for the purpoae of implementing their plans for establishment of regional or local enterprises as well as consideration of the establishment of a national bank charged with promotion of their investments. Prime Minister Mohammed Mzali assured the participants of the seminar that he would do everything in his power to eliminate any difficulties arising from red tape, which he said is "a word that simply does not exist in the Arabic language." He announGed that the initiative taken by Monzi Kooli, leader of the party, led to creation of the economic snd social service of the Destourian Socialist Party which will aesist interested parties in taking the necessary administrative steps. Furthermore, Hedi Mabrouk, Tunisian ambassad~r to France, volunteered to establish a"cell" in esch coneulate which would help each repatriated emigrant with the - fc,nalities required to create a new enterpriae. 4 F'OR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY At the same time, Mr Mzali informed the emigrants of efforts that will be made to achieve a large-acale eeonanic boom which will benefit all Tu- nisians and which will "eliminate the causes of emigration." This invol- ' vea solving the unemployment crisis eince, as he said, "this ie a problem that atares us in the face, although eome people are reluctant to speak about it." Consequently, it will be necessary ta create 600,000 jobs during the next 5 or 6 years in accordance with the Sixth Plan. The solution - will conaist of establiahing large agricultural and industrial enterprises "in continental Tunisia between Jendouba and Medenine" which are regions that do not bene~it from "the same rate of growth as the coast." . Meanwhile, in accordance with the resolutions of the seminar, the fate of the , migrant workers should be improved in the countries where they are employed and where the problem exiats. However, this is nnt the case in France which contains 210,000 Tunisian emigrants, more than half of whom are qualified workere (of a total of 350,000 emigrants) and very few c anplaints have been made by them. Nevertheless, it is an urgent matter to conclude an agreement _ with the East German Government and to provide social security benefits and equal rights for Tuniaian workera. The participants of ~he seminar expressed "their deep satisfaction with regard to the new political climate which ten~eto aolidify national unity." However, one of the mo~t important recommendations generated by the aeminar deals with "the need to strengthen the power of the Deatourian Socialis t Party for the purpose of informing as many as poaeible of the migrant w orkera and, for greater effectiveness, to coo~dinate the actiona of the adminis tra- tive organizatfons of the national government with those of the services of the party abroad." - While praiBing the patriotic spirit of the 7Junisian emigrants, their at- tachment to their country and the active role that they play in deFc~nae of its intereste, Mr Mzali denounced the dangers that they run "due to certain organizatione and governments" which sub~ect them �to blacl~ail and attempt to aline them against t}?eir country by making them beli~ve "that the policy employed is not the proper one and that the choices offered are not satisfactory" and by endeavoring to transform them "into eubversi~~e agenta ready to overthrvw the government." The name of no country or organization was cited. However, certain allusions, particularly to actions taken against "all Africans", auggest that the moat likely nation is Libya, which is known to be involved in the Gafsa affair, and which shelters approximately 80,000 Tunisian migrant workers. Neve r the- lesa, the approaches taken by amall cells which tend to convert the worker ~ into "a revolutionary, a left or a right extremist" indicates that the su bv eraive propaganda conducted by the weatern nations is also being conaidered. 5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 At the present time, the cammunist infiltration does not seem to ins~ire tl-:e moat ter~or, Clandestine units of the Tunisian c.ommuniat party in ttie ~ hone counkry itself on 25 August distributed copiea of a leafiet stating that, under pree~ent circumatances, they believed it was indeed poasible "to arrive at a national co~promi.ae provided that substxntial politic~l cna:tges were - made," that is, that z general r~mne~ty, guarantees of freedom of apeech and tt~e pru~er modification of trade union and atu3ent representation should ~ be provic3~d. ~he question of amnesty is indeed of primary import~nce since the approval o� this me~sure would permit r~election of inembers of the - former governing staff of rhe Tuniaian General Federation of Labor, which was recently ~ardoned but, because of this, did not regain their civil .rights - zhat would only be retur~ed by means of an amnesty. On the other hand, relations between the Destourian Socialist Party and the French Socialist Par,ty have not been restored in spite of the excellent r~ce~?tion accorded Alai:~ Savary due to the services rendered by him to the cause of Tunisian independence. Foliowing the events that took place ir~ January 1978, relations betwecn these two parties had become strained and the Socialist Party had drawn clos~ to the opposition Tunisian organizationa in France and in particular to the Popular Unity Movement headed by Ahmed _ Ben Salah. Following a secret "national conference" h~ld in Tunisia in July, the Popular Unity Movement refuaed to consider its participation in "epotty or partiat political solutions" unless there was a"basic and real.change" and, in particular, general amnesty aci3 respect for ci~il liberties. The decision of the Popular Unity Movement, fahich is $ppreciably harder than the position of the Tunisian Commurd.et Party, makes the former the most determined opponent of the policy of gradual overtures now being firm the importance of the Popular Unity rlovement in ~rance, it is obvious that c~ntamination of the migrant workers by its propaganda is worrying Mr Mzali. The strengthen- ing of overturea ~f the Destourian Socialist Party in France is aimed at cambatting such actions. "The atrangest part of it", said Mr Mzali to the members of the seminar of the migrant workers "is that some parties and groups try to make contact with you. Wouldn't it be better for them to operate in their own back- yard? Whether they come from the West or the East, what right do they have ~ . to give us lessona in advanced social doctrine?... It is unreasonable that - the last word should go to the one who speaks loudly and who banga hie fiat on the table...". rIr'Mzali, who was interviewed by France-Inter during the seminar, atated - that the situation of the migrant workera in France is one of the matters to be aealt with by him ~ointly with the French prime minister and said "The most important item on the agenda is the future of cooperation." _ "We must", continued Mr Mzali, "reorganize the cooperation effort, advance t~ a higher level and consider not only the problem of commercial exchange or the problem of technical assistance. We must go further than this. It is necessary that the Tunisiana and the French be able to make ~oint investmenta, to take joint economic risks, to pr anote the trilogy together, 6 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY to employ Arab capital and to create the wealth that will benefit the French as well as the Tunisiana and the Arabs since cooperatinn~means reciprocity.... Large Franco-Tunisian plants can be constructed for ex- porting and the French will find certain advantages in this arrangement." We can see that it is a queation of employing more Tuniaian labor efficiently in Tunieia. It ie not neceesary for the Tuniaian worker to e.migrate. Everything depends on the flexibility and logic of the political thinking of Mr Mzali and the Destourian Socialist Party. In fact, even during this vacation period, the effort of the party is directed to other social and economic facets. It is a question of satisfying the needs of the citizena in all aspects and in various activities. It was in this vein that Mongi Kooli, head o.f the party addressed the new members of the National Office of Destourian St~3er.ts. "The important thing" said he "is to impart new life to the student movement in order to rally to the party the greatest number of competent students." The lzader stated Mr Kooli . "should first of all be devoted to success in his studies which will earn him more respect and influence. He mU.st a~so possess the gift of persuasion - and must conduct himself in an exemplary fashion." An office has been created under the direction of the Party for the purpose of teac;hing and guiding the r~tudents. At the same time, Abdeaselem Dinassi, secretary general of the Tunisian ilnion of Youth Organizations told the presa that the time has come for the atudenta "to organize themselves freely and democratically in one or more organizations of their choice.... There is no longe1 any place for careerists, unscrupulous individuala and opportunists.... Our major objective is to en- dow all of the youth organizations with a functional, democratic and re- presentative function." During the eame day, Mongi Kooli chaired a meeting of the Destourian cell of skopkeepers and craftsmen of the Tunis native markets whose problems, according to him, concern the government a great deal. He recalled the role played by the markets in ttxe struggle for freed an, for the apread of civil- ization and for maintenance of the Tunisian personality. In regard to this aubject, he said "What :L recommend to you above all is to never allow a single handicraft industry to die out." He concluded by insiating on the values of morality and integrity as well as the complementary nature of the interests of the producer and the consumer. It should be pointed out that the nativ~e marketplace is an important employer of labor. Its prosperity will contribute to the elimination of emigration. Thus is demonstrated and coherence of the socioeconomic policy of the Tunisian Government. COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie Paris 1980 7619 CSO: 4400 7 , FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ~JNLY WESTERN SAHARA MOROCCO SAID TO CO~TTROL MORE TERRAIN, POLISARIO TO CONTROL PROPAGANDA Paris JEUNE AFRIQUE in French 24 Sep 80 pp 30-34 [Article by Abdelaziz Dahmani: "The Turning Point"] [Text] The wind has changed in the Sahara, and over the past few months it is blowing more and more to Morocco�s advantage in the long war that sets it against the POLISARIO. On the eve of the fifth anniversary of this murderous confrontation I am almost inclined to write that Morocco is in a fair way to win its war, for very substantial reasons and with a number of indications in evidence. Counterstroke While crossing through.the parts of the Sahara r~puted to be the most dangerous, the most "rotted-out," at the end of August and the beginning of September 1980, I noted that the climate of this war has markedly changed in the last f ew months. First it is in order to correct some false pictures. The Sahara war is absolutely not "the war of the sands." More properly, it is the war of the mountainsides, of the bald peaks, hollowed out by the sun, the cliffs of Che Hamada, the beds of the dried-out wadis, the rubble, the caches and the rare water-holes. The sand is ~there sometimes, for the sake of nostalgia and poetry. It is a marginal factor in this war of position which picks up activity more often than not in the disputing of the most mountainous regions, such as Ouarkziz or the manifold irregularities of terrain in the Saquiet E1 Hamra. Further south the Guelta Zesnmoun is already more firmly in Moroccan hands. Control of these regions determines~the security of a great many towns, hamlets and garrisons. And Morocco_is gaining more territory every day. It was precisely into the foothills of Saquiet E1 Hamra that I asked to go, incidentally expecting a polite refusal. But General Ahmed Dlimi and his aides, such as Colonel Abdelaziz Benani, chief of staff at Southern Front Headquarters, - gave me the run of the area and supplied all necessary means for getting there. I counted no less than 29 lai~dings by helicopter, Bell and Puma, and several trips , by Land Rover, that new came~. of the deserC. Last March and April, however, it was the triumphant communiques of the POLISARIO that then seemed to be in control of the major part of Quarkziz, right in the midst of "uncontested Morocco," and the foothills of the Saquiet. The Ouarkziz mountain chain along the Algerian-Moroccan frontier, then the so~lth flank of. Wadi Draa, 8 FnR f1F~'rnreT. iTSF. (1NT,Y APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 almost to the Atlantic coast. This is the axis that enabled the POLISARIO to carry - the war all the way into Moroccan territory, fram Akka to Tan-Tan, over an arc of several hundred kilometers. It was enough to control these mountainsides and the ~ unavoidable passes, to know the terrain well, to have secure caches and a few accomplices to strike swiftly and disappear. - Tt~~us, during the first three years of the war the Moroccan Army had to endure the blows of the POLISARIO. Masquerading under the guise of strategy was a static - policy, content with mere defense of the towns, mines and highway axes, abandoning ~ the desert zones. It was dangerous, as the Sahraoui guerri~las could organize as they pleased and had the initiative the whole rime. The result: military def eats and the lowest possible morale. The riposte began in October 1979 with mobilization of the Ohoud group, followed by the Zellaka and Larak units. Their objective was to rake the Sahara, progressively push back the POLISARIO, regain control of Guelta Zemmoun and Ouarkziz. Up to mid-April 1980 the POLISARIO score. Since then the change in strategy has borne fruit, and for the Sahaoui, it is the turn of the tide. Great Discretion This change is also to be explained by the new state of morale in the Moroccan Army, which appears to have gotten over it complexes and traumatisms of the past. The officers are full of confidence, starting with General Dlimi who has directed the totality of operations since last April and Ma}r. A tall man with a lean f.ace, eyes very mobile and wrinkled brow, white at the temples, the commander of the Army of the Southern Front, age 48, is an officer with "command presence," which does not exclude a certain timidity and a d iscreet sense of humor. En3oying the confidence of King Hassan II, h~ is chiefly known for his great discretion and his capacity for adapting te every kind of terrain and condition of ~ lif e. Thanks to a good supply system and an excellerit communications network it was possible to see him that very day--in the Sahara, with binoculars and a General Staff map in hand, then later in the royal palaces of Rabat or Fez in his capacity of Chief of ADC's to His Majesty. This particular hat he wears enables General Dlimi to function as one of the closest collaborators of Hassan II. He is also one . of the few Moroccan officials, tagether'with Ahmed Reda Guedira, who is familiar with the fundamentals of the Sahara affair, in all it facets. A bit of this stems from his origins--the Dlimi tribe--a lot f.rom a profound knowledge of the terrain acquired since age 5, without mentioning several diplomatic missions conducted discreetly, including certain "secret".meetings with Algerian and POLISARIO emissaries at Bamako, Geneva and elsewhere. But let u:~ get back to Ouarkziz, only recently a hangout for Moroccans, where I have just spent several days which turned into a... tourist promenade. There, for the mere asking, the helicopter took me taxi-fashion, together with the region commander, Colonel Boujendar, to Assa (attacked by thQ POLISARIO on 4 Jixne 1979), to Foum E1 Hassen (attacked and occ.upied 14 July 1979), to Akka (attacked and parti.~~lly occupied 25 January, then 29 June 1980). Each of these towns (each with some thousands of Berber or Arab inhabitants) are about 50 kilometers distant from th~ theoretical Alger ian-Maroccan frontier, below the Bani chain and next to ,a the Drac, valley, while to the east E1 Ouarkziz raises its dark and ominous bulk. 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850ROOQ3QOQ5QOQ5-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY A Regular Billiard-Table T f.lew over this mountain chain at several different points, with some anxiety on take-off. But the serenity of my two pilots who fly the routes withou t maps, and the friendly company of Colonel Bouj end~ar quickly a'llayed my fears. From Assa we ` - even plunged ~LSt above ground-level toward the Algerian frontier and flew over the Braber Pass, where we saw a traffic-,jam of trucks! Those in one direction, fully - loaded, were bringing supplies to Zag; the others, empty, were on the way bac~ to Foulimine. It was suggested that I land there, if I wished, and go along with some of the convoy as far as Zag, on the other side of Ouar kziz. I preferr ed to drop down half-way along, at Tisgui-Remz, on the eastern slope of Ouarkziz, where the POLISARIO often took jourz~alists. Below begins the enormous plain of Hamada, a regular b~lliard-table, which leads to the environs of Tindouf... Tizgui-Remz today hardly gives the impression of a threatened garri:son. Despite . temperatures of 46� C in the shade, I ate fine frzsh grapes brought in from the north.,. At Assa, Foum E1 Hassen, Akka, I was particularly astonished by the casual bearing of the military, for whom "all thought of danger is from now on out of the question." And as it was just about ~everywhere I went, the preoccupation of the moment at this time, beginning of September, was being separated fr~m one's , family. Particularly the circumstances that children were soon to go back to ; _ school, those from the north, to various parts of the country. At Assa I found a small town cut in two by a palm plantation. The old town of ' Ksar T;1 Haratines has a mainly black population. Lots of new buildings and even some TV antennas, e~~en though there is no electric power in the town yet. Water, on the other hand, is abundant there, breaking out of the ground in ma.ny places. Unable to find any signs of anxiety, I set about finding a Berber necklace in the local souks. This piPce of jewelry alone brought back old memoriea. Here the ~ Ali-Youssa (the local population) were from time immemorial sworn enemies of the Reguibets a living burden in Algeria and present skeleton-framework of the POLTSARIO. [Typo in text, last sentence a guess, Tr.] For centuries the Reguibets attacked the villages of Bani (and vice-versa) to raid _ the livestock and bring back from the other side of the Hamada of Tindouf the jewelry of the Berber women as trophies �or their own wives. [dithout Escort I encountered the same situation at Foum El Hassen and at Akka, inhabited by the Ait Mribet (Berbers) and the Ou1ed Jellai (Arabs). Akka nestles on a hillside and the palm plantation is bigger than anywhere else. At Akka, in the early afternoon of this 2d of Septem~er, I 3.eft Colonel Boujendar to settle some military matters and did a tour of the town, then of th e palm _ plantation, some 17 kilometers, in a little 4 hp Renault accorr~panied by the Caid (a young administrative official of the region) . No escort of any kind. Even - when visiting the adjoining villages of Tagadirt. Ait Antar, Douar E1 Kasba, Agad~.r-Ouzrou. The quest for a Berb~r necklace became a pretext for many � discussions and stops for tea. Behind humble facades they sometimes serve you tea in glasses manufactured over a century ago in the famous French crystal-works of = Saint-Louis. In the late afternoon--with the t~mperature more clemen t--we found 10 4l~D /~z7T'^'^'' "T TTCF (1TJT V APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 ourselves under the pomegranate-trees of the Caid's house, and he pressed hard for us to spend the night there. The colonel`s appointment-book gets us off the hook! We take our leave with regrets. We learn later on that on the following day, _ _ 3 September at dawn, the POLISARIO attempted to approach Akka (and Tata) and that it was halted by one of the Ouarkziz patrols some 20 kilometers from its ob~ective. . Prestigious Officers Thia did not surprise me. The day before this attack I overflew several elements 1 of the Moroccan Army well deployed on various hills and plateaus with impressive ` mat~riel: armored vehicles, heavy machine-guns, tractor-drawn artillery camouflaged behind stone walls. Moreover, the inhabitants of Assa, Foum E1 Hassen, Akka and other villages recently received arms at their request so they might participate in the defense of their families, property, livestock... At this time in the beginning of September Ouarkziz, even though bordering on Algeria and despite the attacks of 3 September on Tata and Akka, is no longer the f irst concern of the Moroccan Army. Tata and Akka were harried fram a distance, thank5 to the exceptional range of the "SLalin-organs" and above all, it would seem, to impress the members of the Committee of Wise Men of the OAU who were supposed to hold a meezing a few days later at Freetown. The thr.ust of the current war effort aims to control the region crossed by the path - from Tan-T~n to Smara, especially the obligatory passes of the Abatteh region at the l~a1f-way mark, from Tan-Tan to the holy city of Smara. Several times in the past few weeks the POLISARIO announced that it had attacked and evet~ occupied Abatteh. ~I went there three times at the end of August, and on the afternoon of Saturday the 30th, taken there in Colonel-Major Abrouk's Bell helicopter, I witnessed an award of decorations by General Ahmed Dlimi in the name of King Hassan II. Some twenty officers, noncommissioned and enlisted men of other ranks received war-palms for high feats of arms... Among them a bearded captain named Khomeyni. As it happened, several days before, a POLISARIO column, under siege and starving, was driven to the imprudent move of attacking almost right out in the ~ open a food supply convoy... The result was 80 vehicles destroyed and several key positions lost on the hillsides of Saquiet El Hamra. At that point a vast clean-up operation began, and immediately Morocco regained ; several hills, making the opening of the Tan-Tan - Smara path by control of the ' obligatory passages to be expected soon... This region south of Abatteh was where ~ I saw, even more than on E1 Ouarkziz, the greatest concentration of military ~ equipment and the most prestigious officers. ~ ~ On thls peak, unnamed on any map, even a Headquarters military map, an entire , ballet-troupe of helicopters simultaneously landed General Dlimi, Colonel-Major Abrouk (chief of the Zellaka Group), the colonels Benani and Ben Othman (chief of ~ the Larak Group) as well as a large number of their staffs. The vacillating morale - of ].ast year is nc longer in zvidence, all the more so as the opposition is no l.ongnr fighting with the same faith or the same conviction. - Warriors from Elsewhere Somethinb fundamental about this war began to change in May, and as these officers see it, the end of. the war seems closer. Nor is there any question in their minds 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY � any more of letting go the slightest bit of "thPir" Sahara, now that they see with ever increasing certainty the profile of military victory behind the next row o� hills. Peace? "That's the business of the political people," one of them told me. Curiously enou~h, it is in the most recent "triumphalist" communiques of the POLISARIO that certain officers are today assessing their own measure of success. - At the time of the Battle of the Rgueibiyne on 21 August, in the Abatteh region, _ the POLISARIO announced that 582 troops of the Royal Armed Forces had been "put out of action." As interpreted by Colonel-Major Abrouk, who knows what really happened that day, "The POLISARIO must have reported to their own headquarters in Tindouf _ three times the number of their own dead in order to camouflage their defeat with an illusory and mendacious victory." In this battle the POLISARIO may well have lost the chief of this region. At the bottom of a gully was found a service tunic with a clean collar, spotted with blood and riddled with bullet-holes, with the white scarf of a major commander, but no body. Th~ measurements r_ally with those of the famous Algerian-Sahraoui major commander Ayoub, who for the past S years.has always given a formidable account of himself to any who opposed him. Neither has there been any official confirmation of this casualty. The corpse--if there ever was a corpse--or the gravely wounded ` man, was removec3. The fact that the POLISARIO in the last Tew months has been leaving more dead bodies than usual behind on the battlefield is because they are recruits who come frum further and further away (from Mauritania or Mali) and because the guerrillas no longer feel the compunction to remove them to send them back to their families, as they do for the authentic Sahraoui. Ambushes How many are there left of these Sahraoui guerrillas, who came from what was the _ Western Sahara? According to very reliable sources, and after interrogati~n of some deserters and prisoners, there could not be much more than a thousand, many of whom are tired, ill and suffering backaches from the tens of thousands of kilo- meters of riding a Land Rover. This situation paradoxically brought about a net change in familiarity with the terrain. The original members of the authentic POLISARIQ are fewer and fewer, while over 5 years the Moroccans, of whom there are more anyway, have made themselves totally familiar with the desert and its traps and ambush-points. It is, however, still necessary to use guides, Sahraoui who have chosen to come over to the Moroccan camp. Unless Algeria From the week I spent in the hottest spots of the ~aha�ra I drew the conclusion that Morocco is effecting a lot of cleanup operations silently, thanks to an air _ force that is becoming increasingly operational. Several of ~�ese victorious strikes have never been mentioned. Contrarily, the POLISARIO is putting out a lot of psychological activity which reverberates the next day all over Africa and the world. Today's reality is that Morocco controls more ground, and the POLISARIO controls the propaganda. . 12 Fnu nFFT^T~T rt~F. f1Nr.Y APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 _ At the beginning of September an influential POLISARIO leader cladestinely based at r~ouadhibou in the north of Mauritania chose of his own free will to abandon the struggle and disappear in the direction of Dakar. He passed the following terrible confidential remark: "In the field, Morocco, silently, is in the process of getting rid of the POLISARIO, one man after the other. And there aren't very many of us left." Unless Algeria, Libya... COPYRIGHT: Jeune Afrique GRUPJIA 1980 2750 CSO: 4400 ~ 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300054405-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY WESTERN SAHARA BRIEFS POLISARIO GETS SOVIET WEAPONS--French officials are concerned about deliveries of sophisticated missiles to the POLISARIO. This Soviet-manufactured equipment is supplied by Lihya which is involving itself more and more on the Sahraoui side. While Algeria appears to be keeping itself apart. [Text] [Paris JEUNE AFRIQUE in French 17 Sep 80 p 50] 2750 MAURITANIAN PRISONERS OF POLISARIO--Two hundred seventy-eight Mauritanians are said _ to be still prisoners of the POLISARIO. This is the total of confidential tabula- ~ tions made by Headquarters at Nouakchott following the recent liberation of 125 military and civilian personnel. (Text] [Paris JEUNE AFRIQUE in French 17 Sep 80 p SOJ 2750 CSO : 4400 g~ 1Lt ~ F~u n~~T~T�;. rrcF n~rr.v APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300050005-8