It seems a very long time since Algeria-watchers questioned whether a political beast with ambitions to control the military/security establishment and its 'deep state' structures – known in Algeria as le pouvoir ('the powers-that-be') – was lying within the unlikely figure of Deputy Defence Minister and Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Ahmed Gaïd Salah...
In the months since February security force décideurs have been toppled along with ex-President Abdelaziz Bouteflika his omnipresent brother Saïd Bouteflika four-time premier Ahmed Ouyahia and a number of crony business kingpins yet Gaïd Salah has not only retained control of the army but has been calling the shots within the interim government and an empowered judiciary (AC Vol 60 No 7 Protests flush out the old guard & Vol 60 No 13 Rounding up unusual suspects)...
Gaïd Salah's departure is a central demand of Hirak (The Movement) protesters who have filled the streets every Friday since 22 February...
Instead Gaïd Salah has moved centre-stage leading a social media activist to comment on the eve of the Algerian national football team's first African Cup of Nations (Afcon) final for 27 years that the result could be 'critical for the general's future… If we lose the crowd could finally lose its commitment to peaceful protest and turn on the General'...
The army was not deployed to control any backlash as Hirak has largely stuck to its impressive non-violent stance; indeed an attempt to intimidate protesters by organising army live-fire exercises rebounded and Gaïd Salah quickly learned to move more cautiously...
Efforts to involve the former ruling Front de libération nationale (FLN) and Rassemblement national démocratique (RND) parties have won demonstrators' scorn; in recent weeks that dialogue's coordinator Parliament Speaker Karim Younes has been almost as vilified in popular chants as Gaïd Salah himself...
Salah's biddingMany believe Gaïd Salah is pulling the strings...
'They know Gaïd Salah is the one with power at present so they will do his bidding ' commented once close observer...
With so little settled for the long-term Gaïd Salah's position is powerful but potentially vulnerable...
Gaïd Salah is well aware that his rival former military security chief Major General Mohammed 'Tewfik' Medienne kept files on such issues; indeed the chief-of-staff has seized many of them (AC Vol 60 No 7 Protests flush out the old guard)...
To shore up his position Gaïd Salah loyalists have been appointed at the top of the Direction Générale de la Sécurité Intérieure (DSI) military 'counter-espionage' agency...
General Wassini Bouazza was quickly appointed DSI head in April after Gaïd Salah managed to sack previous DSI chief General Lakhdar Abdelkader's boss and Bouteflika clan security supremo General Athmane 'Bachir' Tartag...
Bouazza held a senior post in Gaïd Salah's fief the Ministry of National Defence rather than having the usual military security background...
While Gaïd Salah has more of his men in place it will be trickier to create a political configuration that meets some Hirak demands while largely keeping the traditional structure in place...