Spanish foreign minister presses EU to retrain
focus on migration
After winning a NATO pledge to monitor the situation,
José Manuel Albares tells POLITICO Spain is returning its sights to the
intractable EU migration pact.
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO
July 7,
2022 4:02 am
MADRID —
Spain wants the EU to revive its perpetually dormant migration talks after
Madrid secured a related NATO pledge last week.
During an
interview from his majestic 15th-century official residence in downtown Madrid,
Spanish Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares told POLITICO the EU must finally
settle on new rules for processing and relocating asylum seekers and
undocumented migrants — something it has failed to do for years.
It’s a task
easier said than done. Migration policy has long bitterly divided EU leaders,
and progress isn’t expected any time soon. But Albares argued new rules were
necessary, describing them as a key missing piece to the EU’s migration policy.
The issue
is a critical one for Spain, as the country regularly receives people coming
across its borders from northern Africa, including many who jump the fence
separating the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla from surrounding Morocco.
Last week,
Spain convinced NATO to nod to the issue in its once-a-decade strategy document
— a win for the country. Now Albares is urging the EU to follow suit, and go
further.
“We must
strengthen the ties between the European Union and the countries of origin and
transit,” he said.
“Spain is
the only EU country with a land border with Africa, and that is an external EU
border,” he added. “If we consider Africa as one block and the EU as another,
that land border is almost certainly the most unequal border on the planet by
almost any criterion: GDP per capita, GDP, population, age, mother-child
health, illiteracy.”
Spain leans
on NATO
Northern
Africa was one of the many subplots during last week’s NATO summit in Madrid,
which mostly focused on Russia’s war in Ukraine and folding Finland and Sweden
into the military alliance.
As host,
Spain was pushing NATO allies to pay attention to threats emerging from
northern Africa, the Sahel and the Middle East, the alliance’s southern flank.
Spanish officials argued that regional destabilization, not to mention local
Russian and Chinese influence, was fostering terrorism and fueling migration.
In response
to Spain’s appeal, NATO vowed to focus on these challenges in its updated
“Strategic Concept,” the first time it had updated the long-term vision
document since 2010.
The pledge
was Spain’s biggest goal for NATO’s summit, Albares said, arguing the language
will help Spain tackle the “unacceptable political use of energy and migratory
flows” as a weapon against EU countries.
Spain has
separately stepped up its efforts to tackle the reasons pushing migrants to
attempt a dangerous journey to the EU, but it can’t face the increasing number
of arrivals alone, Albares added.
Yet while
the country has worked to improve its relationship with Morocco since Albares
was appointed foreign minister a year ago, it has still found itself in
numerous migration controversies.
In the days
leading to the NATO summit, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez was accused of
failing to condemn the violent response of Moroccan police to the attempted
crossing of about 2,000 migrants on June 24, which left 23 to 37 people killed,
depending on estimates. He later backtracked after admitting he hadn’t seen the
troubling images.
Asked if
Madrid demanded any sort of explanation from Rabat, Albares replied he wanted
to wait for Spanish and Moroccan prosecutors to complete their inquiries before
attributing responsibility. A group of 51 European Parliament members has also
asked the European Commission to carry out its own investigation.
Albares
also showed empathy toward the Moroccan officials patrolling the border.
“We should
put ourselves in the shoes of those Moroccan police officers and gendarmerie
because they do a very complex and difficult job — it is not easy to face an
avalanche of 2,000 people unexpectedly,” he said.
The
minister stressed managing migration flows can’t be done without Morocco’s
cooperation and without more investment in Africa’s development.
Under
Sánchez’s leadership, Spain’s overseas aid has returned to levels not seen over
the last decade and Albares is steering a bill to meet by 2030 the United
Nations’ target of spending 0.7 percent of the country’s gross national income
on overseas development.
Spain and
Morocco
During
Albares’ tenure, Spain has made several major moves to appease Morocco.
Most
importantly, Madrid in March abandoned the country’s neutrality toward Western
Sahara’s independence claims, choosing to support Morocco’s plan to grant the
territory autonomous status under Moroccan control.
That left
gas-rich Algeria, which advocates for Western Sahara’s independence, furious.
The country tore up a cooperation deal with Spain in early June, triggering
concerns that Algeria may cut off energy supplies to Spain — a step it has yet
to take.
The
situation represented quite the turnaround for Spain and Morocco.
Shortly
before Albares’ appointment, relations with Morocco had hit rock bottom when
Madrid allowed a rebel leader in Western Sahara to secretly receive treatment
for COVID-19 in a Spanish hospital. In response, Morocco relaxed its border
controls, sending more than 10,000 migrants crossing into the Spanish city of
Ceuta over a day and a half. EU leaders quickly closed ranks, calling on
Morocco to protect the border.
Albares
insists Spain can have good ties with both Morocco and Algeria simultaneously
despite their differences over Western Sahara.
But Spain’s
actions have shown which partner takes priority. Since the end of June, Spain
has played a key role in helping Morocco cover its energy needs by pumping gas
through the Maghreb-Europe gas pipeline.
Spain is
walking on a tightrope there, as well: Algeria, which had refused to sell its
own gas to Morocco, threatened to cut gas supplies to Spain if it discovered
Madrid was redirecting any Algerian gas to Morocco.
Still,
Albares said Spain’s relationship with Morocco “has entered a new phase” of
“mutual respect and mutual interest” in which both countries want to tackle
this century’s challenges together.
This is
“exactly the same” relationship Spain wants with Algeria, he continued, while
cautioning that countries must not interfere in each other’s internal affairs
or require exclusivity at the expense of good ties with other neighbors.
Albares, a
former ambassador to France and one-time international affairs adviser for
Sánchez, stressed that Spain is a “sovereign state that takes its own decisions
autonomously.”
Its shift
on Western Sahara, he argued, is not a decision “that affects Algeria or its
people.”
“Spain’s
position on the Western Sahara is very clear: we are looking for a solution
under the framework of the United Nations that is mutually acceptable and we
support the personal envoy of the U.N. Secretary-General [Staffan de Mistura]
in his task,” he said.
Albares
also refuted claims that supporting Morocco’s sovereignty claim over Western
Sahara could embolden Rabat to press harder for control of Spain’s coastal
enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla in northern Africa.
NATO’s duty
to protect both cities in the event of an attack “has never been questioned”
during Spain’s 40 years as a member of the alliance, he said.
Last week,
NATO leaders pledged to “defend every inch of Allied territory at all times” in
a joint statement.
This
statement, Albares said, represents a guarantee that Ceuta and Melilla would be
protected, even if they are not technically covered by the alliance’s famed
Article 5 clause — an attack on one member is an attack on all — which is
buried in NATO’s foundational treaty of 1949 and predates Spain’s membership.
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg, however, also stressed that allies would have to
make a “political decision” in such a situation — not necessarily an iron-clad
guarantee.
“Spaniards
and especially those who may want to threaten Spain should have no doubts: The
government would always defend Spain’s territorial integrity and sovereignty to
take its own decisions,” he said.

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