The secret US plan to turn Morocco into Israel's western shield
Defence affairs - Def-Geopolitics
2027 defense budget: a ten-year roadmap arming Morocco with drones, bases, and a counter-Iran fortress facing the Atlantic
While Israelis stay fixed on the rocket sirens and the fronts they know by heart, the most consequential reinforcement of Israel's western flank is happening quietly, far from any battlefield, inside the United States Senate. No press conference announced it. No spokesperson in Jerusalem has mentioned it.
Buried deep in the newly filed Fiscal Year 2027 National Defense Authorization Act, S. 4784, sits Section 1268. It carries an unglamorous title, a plan to enhance defense cooperation with Morocco. But for anyone tracking Israel's strategic depth, this is one of the most important sentences written in Washington this year.
Section 1268 is a binding legislative order. It directs the Pentagon to deliver Congress, within 180 days of enactment, a full ten-year roadmap covering 2026 through 2036 for transforming Morocco into the most capable American military partner on the African continent. The Senate Armed Services Committee, chaired by Roger Wicker, reported the bill on June 15. It now awaits a floor vote, with House language moving in parallel.
Morocco was the first Arab state to normalize ties with Israel that came with real defense substance attached, not just flights and trade missions. What Section 1268 does is take that bilateral defense roadmap, quietly signed in April, and lock it into American law. Once a security relationship is written into the NDAA, it survives elections, budget fights and changes of administration. Israel does not have to lobby for this. Washington is doing it on Israel's behalf, and doing it from Moroccan soil.
Think about what that means geographically. While the IDF holds the line against Iranian proxies on Israel's northern and southern borders, the United States is methodically building a hardened, well-armed, technologically advanced security partner at the far western edge of the Arab world. It is not charity. It is a pincer. A Morocco that can defend its own skies and project power across the Sahel is a Morocco that closes off an entire theater where Iran has been trying to open a new front against Israel by proxy.
The details inside Section 1268 read like a wish list for anyone worried about Tehran's reach into Africa. The bill orders new joint security sites on Moroccan soil, giving American and allied forces forward logistics bases for rapid deployment into the Sahel and across Mediterranean choke points. It mandates the rehabilitation of old Cold War era airfields across the kingdom so they can handle modern strategic airlift and surveillance aircraft, a direct response to the collapse of American basing options elsewhere in West Africa after a wave of juntas turned toward Moscow and, in some cases, toward Tehran's orbit as well.
This is not a small adjustment. For two decades, Washington's African basing map ran largely through the Sahel and the Gulf of Guinea. That map has been collapsing country by country as coups install governments hostile to the West. Morocco is the stable, willing replacement, and Section 1268 effectively writes that replacement into ten years of American defense planning.
It also creates a dedicated center for drone warfare and counter drone defense inside Morocco. That single line should make Israeli defense planners sit up. Morocco has spent the last several years buying Israeli loitering munitions, Barak air defense systems and Elta radars. Layering an American funded drone hub on top of that existing Israeli hardware base does not just help Morocco. It builds a live trilateral testing ground where American, Moroccan and Israeli systems mature together against the exact threat, cheap proliferated drones, that has already killed Israelis and wounded American troops across the region. Every iteration of that hub effectively becomes a free field laboratory for the kind of low-cost aerial threats now shaping every battlefield from Lebanon to the Red Sea.
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