"It is not cowardly, quite the contrary, to seek to meet the adversary and know his intentions. However, it is cowardly, shameful and treasonable to lay down arms"
About this Quote
Hassan II draws a hard line between prudence and surrender, and he does it with the moral confidence of a monarch who survived plots, riots, and the cold arithmetic of regional war. The first sentence rehabilitates a politically useful act: talking to the enemy. By insisting it is "not cowardly" to meet an adversary and "know his intentions", he reframes diplomacy as reconnaissance-by-other-means. The language is almost clinical; intentions are treated like intelligence to be extracted, not empathy to be cultivated. That matters in a postcolonial, Cold War North Africa where back-channel contacts could look like weakness, and where leaders were constantly performing resolve for both domestic rivals and foreign patrons.
Then comes the trapdoor: negotiation is permitted only as long as it never threatens the theater of strength. "Lay down arms" isn't just disarmament; it's a metaphor for yielding sovereignty, legitimacy, and the king's claim to be the state's protective spine. The escalation from "cowardly" to "shameful and treasonable" is deliberate: he moves from personal failing to collective betrayal, turning dissent into a security offense. In a monarchy that faced attempted coups and governed amid nationalist passions, that triad is a warning shot to elites and opposition alike: you may talk, you may probe, you may even bargain - but any gesture that reads as capitulation will be punished not as error but as betrayal.
The quote works because it licenses flexibility while keeping the red lines sacred. It offers the modern-sounding veneer of dialogue, then anchors authority in the oldest currency of rule: the right to define loyalty.
Then comes the trapdoor: negotiation is permitted only as long as it never threatens the theater of strength. "Lay down arms" isn't just disarmament; it's a metaphor for yielding sovereignty, legitimacy, and the king's claim to be the state's protective spine. The escalation from "cowardly" to "shameful and treasonable" is deliberate: he moves from personal failing to collective betrayal, turning dissent into a security offense. In a monarchy that faced attempted coups and governed amid nationalist passions, that triad is a warning shot to elites and opposition alike: you may talk, you may probe, you may even bargain - but any gesture that reads as capitulation will be punished not as error but as betrayal.
The quote works because it licenses flexibility while keeping the red lines sacred. It offers the modern-sounding veneer of dialogue, then anchors authority in the oldest currency of rule: the right to define loyalty.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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