Read on app Read on app
✕
Prayer Times
  • Morocco
  • Lifestyle
  • Western Sahara
  • Login
Morocco World News
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Economy
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Sustainability
  • Tech
  • Sport
  • World Cup 2026
No Result
View All Result
Morocco World News
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Economy
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Sustainability
  • Tech
  • Sport
  • World Cup 2026
No Result
View All Result
Morocco World News

Home > Headlines > The Makhzen Complex: A Psychoanalytical Decoding of Algeria’s Obsession with Morocco

The Makhzen Complex: A Psychoanalytical Decoding of Algeria’s Obsession with Morocco

Rather than a rigid apparatus, the Makhzen has proven highly adaptive, absorbing modern institutions while maintaining continuity with Morocco’s political culture.

Lahcen HaddadbyLahcen Haddad
Jul, 02, 2025
0 0
A A
The Makhzen Complex- A Psychoanalytical Decoding of Algeria’s Obsession with Morocco

The Makhzen Complex- A Psychoanalytical Decoding of Algeria’s Obsession with Morocco

Follow the latest news from Morocco World News

Join on WhatsApp Join on Telegram

The Makhzen is often misunderstood outside Morocco, particularly by its detractors. For Moroccans, Makhzen is not simply a bureaucratic machine or a relic of feudalism—as often caricatured by outsiders—but a deep-rooted, historically evolved system of governance and social cohesion. It refers to the network of traditional authority centered around the monarchy, which includes tribal leaders, dignitaries, religious scholars, and local notables who have historically played a vital role in maintaining unity, mediation, and legitimacy in a diverse and vast territory.

What is the Makhzen for Moroccans?

Rather than a rigid apparatus, the Makhzen has proven highly adaptive, absorbing modern institutions while maintaining continuity with Morocco’s political culture. It embodies continuity, stability, and a sense of identity. It is this very institution—understood not just as state power but as a symbolic and cultural center—that has ensured Morocco’s survival through colonialism, independence, modernization, and the present regional turmoil.

Why Algerian propagandists are obsessed with the Makhzen – A Psychoanalytical Analysis

From a psychoanalytical standpoint, the Algerian regime’s pathological obsession with the Makhzen can be seen as a textbook case of projective identification and narcissistic injury. Let us break this down:

  1. The Makhzen as the “Symbolic Father”

In Lacanian psychoanalysis, the Name-of-the-Father (Nom-du-Père) represents the symbolic law that gives structure to desire, order, and identity. The Makhzen, in the Moroccan imaginary, plays that role: it structures the symbolic order of the nation. Algeria, born in revolutionary rupture, lacks this deep-rooted symbolic continuity. Its political order is haunted by the absence of a legitimized paternal figure—there is no equivalent of a unifying monarchy. Hence, the Makhzen becomes a fantasmatic Other, a projection screen for everything the Algerian regime unconsciously feels it lacks: rootedness, continuity, legitimacy.

  1. Projection and Splitting

The Algerian regime splits the world into “us” (revolutionary, secular, virtuous) and “them” (reactionary, monarchical, manipulative). The Makhzen is turned into a bogeyman—blamed for every social unrest, regional loss of influence, or diplomatic failure. This is pure projection—a mechanism where internal conflicts are externalized and ascribed to the Other. Instead of confronting its own deep crises—economic failure, youth unrest, military domination—the regime externalizes blame onto Morocco and its governing model.

  1. Narcissistic Wound and Envy

Morocco’s stability, global alliances, economic diversification, and successful royal diplomacy expose the failures of Algeria’s military oligarchy. This produces what Freud would call a narcissistic injury. Rather than admit internal decay, the Algerian state apparatus creates a paranoid fantasy of the Makhzen as a monstrous manipulator controlling Africa, Europe, and even Algerian dissent. This obsessive narrative masks envy—a desire to possess what the Other has, accompanied by hatred because one cannot.

  1. Fixation and Compulsion to Repeat

Algeria’s state media and officials mention “le Makhzen” more than they mention their own institutions. This is a fixation—a psychic knot that cannot be worked through. In psychoanalytic terms, their discourse is a compulsion to repeat—the repetition of the same accusatory tropes against the Makhzen reveals an inability to symbolically resolve their own political trauma, namely the betrayal of the revolutionary dream by the generals who hijacked power.

  1. Unconscious Admiration and Identification

Lastly, there is repressed identification. The Algerian state, beneath its hostile rhetoric, secretly admires the symbolic power and international legitimacy of the Moroccan monarchy and its state apparatus. But since this admiration cannot be consciously admitted—given their foundational opposition to monarchy—it returns in the distorted form of obsession, attack, and paranoia. This is the return of the repressed.

Conclusion: The Makhzen as Mirror and Threat

For Algerian elites, the Makhzen is both a mirror—reflecting what they lack—and a threat—exposing the fragility of their power. Psychoanalysis teaches us that what we hate most is often what we unconsciously resemble or desire. In this sense, the anti-Makhzen hysteria is not just political—it is a deep-seated neurotic symptom of an unresolved postcolonial crisis in Algerian statehood.

By invoking the Makhzen obsessively, the Algerian regime unwittingly confirms its own identity crisis—rootless, brittle, and haunted by the authority it cannot emulate and the legitimacy it never fully acquired.

Tags: algeria abd moroccoalgeria and human rights
TweetShareShareSendShareScan

Recent News

A charity photograph taken almost 19 years ago has gained new meaning ahead of the 2026 World Cup final between Argentina and Spain.

From Baby Photo to World Cup Final: Messi and Yamal’s Remarkable Reunion

July 16, 2026
Lamine Yamal is set to fulfil one of his biggest football dreams after Spain and Argentina secured their places in the 2026 World Cup final.

Yamal’s Dream Comes True: ‘I Want to Swap Shirts With Messi in the World Cup Final’

July 16, 2026
ClimateLaunchpad Errachidia Cohort Completes Two-Day Bootcamp

ClimateLaunchpad Errachidia Cohort Completes Two-Day Bootcamp

July 15, 2026
Spanish FA President Warns 2030 World Cup Final Debate Harms Bid

Spanish FA President Warns 2030 World Cup Final Debate Harms Bid

July 15, 2026
Argentina have reached their second consecutive World Cup final after completing a dramatic late comeback to defeat England 2-1

Argentina Beat England 2-1 in World Cup Rematch to Reach Final

July 15, 2026

USEFUL LINKS

  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Careers
  • Terms Of Use
  • Cookies Policy

TOPICS

  • Mawazine 2025
  • Environment
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Western Sahara

REGIONS

  • International
  • Maghreb
  • Middle East
  • Africa

Download our App


Download the Morocco World News app on Google Play for Android

Download the Morocco World News app on the Apple App Store for iPhone and iPad

Copyright 2026 Morocco World News. All rights reserved. Morocco World News is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Read about our approach to external linking.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Economy
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Sustainability
  • Tech
  • Sport
  • World Cup 2026

Useful Links

  • Prayer Times

Useful Links:

  • Prayer Times

All Right Reserved © 2026 Morocco World News .

Contact us
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?