In a Casablanca barbershop, a local barber praises President Trump as a “real cowboy” and cheers U.S. action against Iran. This firsthand account reveals how American strength and decisiveness are perceived far beyond Washington—and why global audiences study U.S. power, not rhetoric.
U.S. recognition of Western Sahara as part of Morocco wasn’t symbolic. It was a strategic signal. Dino Buloha explains why Washington must now turn that move into real policy: backing Morocco’s autonomy plan and demanding accountability around Tindouf.
Morocco has lived a different story for centuries—one where faith can steady a nation instead of shaking it, and where identity can include people rather than expel them.