"On July 15, 1786 (18 Ramadan 1200), in Marrakech, American agent Thomas Barclay was handed the final protocol of the Treaty of Peace and Friendship by his Moroccan counterpart Taher Ben Abdelhack Fennish," said Pham in an article posted on the U.S. think-tank website.
He added that the certified translations of the Treaty was signed by Thomas Jefferson and John Adams as ministers plenipotentiary and ratified by Congress the following year on July 18, 1787.
+A treaty full of still relevant lessons+
“The long-term success of the partnership which emerged from the treaty contains lessons which are still relevant as Washington seeks to strengthen or forge links with other African countries, especially those along the Atlantic coast of the continent,” Pham said.
Underlining that Morocco was the first country to recognize the independence of the United States when, in December 1777, as President Barrack Obama recalled in his Cairo speech, the author noted that the 1786 treaty covered everything from diplomatic relations to non-hostility and access to markets on the basis of “most favored nation”
He also noted that security interests help to consolidate other ties as “the final article to be attached to the treaty was a security provision that was most beneficial to the young American nation at a time when its merchant shipping was often preyed upon by various European warships.”
+ Morocco, U.S. key ally in the region+
This protection “has over the centuries evolved to the point where Morocco is one of just over a dozen countries to enjoy the designation of “Major Non-NATO Ally of the United States,” said Pham who wrote several geo-strategic essays on Africa, Maghreb and Sahel region.
“More than two centuries after its signing,” he argued, “the pact has proven to have justified both the farsightedness of Mohammed III and the efforts of Washington, Adams, and Jefferson.”
Pham concluded that Morocco remains a major ally, moderate and reformist country for the United States as well as a geostrategic springboard for links presently being forged in the increasingly important areas along the Africa’s Atlantic coast.