The North African country maintained its firm belief that a negotiated political solution was still possible.
According to Algeria, history had shown that military interventions carry a lot of problems than solutions and that they have been a source of heartbreaks.
It had reported that ECOWAS Defence Chiefs had agreed upon a tentative date for potential military intervention in Niger should diplomatic negotiations fail.
ECOWAS Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, Abdel-Fatau Musah, had revealed the potential “D-Day” following a two-day summit in Ghana.
The focus was primarily on logistics and strategies regarding possible force in Niger, emphasizing that military action would be a final measure.
But in a statement on Sunday, Algeria stated that carrying out a military intervention would not be suitable for the region and Africa as a whole.
The statement reads: “At a time when military intervention in Niger is becoming clearer, Algeria deeply regrets that the use of violence has taken the lead on the path of a negotiated political solution peacefully restoring constitutional and democratic order in this brother and neighbouring country.
“Algeria remains, in fact, with a strong conviction that this negotiated political solution is still possible, that all the paths that can lead to it have not been taken, and that all these possibilities have not been exhausted.
“The history of our region abundantly teaches that military interventions have carried a lot of problems than solutions and that they have been additional factors of clashes and heartbreaks rather than sources of stability and security.