Mali coup forces France to reorganise anti-terror operations in west Africa
France is to reorganise its counter-terrorism operation in west Africa, according to foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, in the wake of a coup d’état in Mali and the arrival of Russian mercenaries to support the junta.
“We are going to reorganise to ensure the continuation of the fight against terrorism,” he told the France 5 television channel late on Monday, adding that President Emmanuel Macron wanted forces to be redeployed but to remain in the west African Sahel region.
“If the conditions are no longer there for us to operate in Mali — and that is clearly the case — we’ll continue to fight terrorism next door with the Sahel countries which definitely want us to do so,” Le Drian said, although he stopped short of announcing an immediate full withdrawal.
Macron will host a dinner at the Elysée Palace on Wednesday — on the eve of an EU-Africa summit in Brussels — for France’s African and European military partners in the Sahel after consultations in recent days led by Le Drian and defence minister Florence Parly, French officials said.
“The aim of the dinner discussions will be to work out how to operate effectively in Mali . . . to see if the conditions are right to continue,” said one official.
Isis and al-Qaeda-linked groups control large parts of central and northern Mali, which jihadis briefly captured in late 2012, prompting a French military intervention that has become increasingly unpopular as violence has spread across the country and into neighbouring Niger and Burkina Faso. Thousands have been killed and millions displaced across the Sahel.
Relations between Paris and Bamako have deteriorated sharply since Assimi Goita led a coup that overthrew the democratically elected government in August 2020 and then seized complete control in a second coup in May 2021, ousting interim civilian leaders who were seen as close to France.
Macron announced in July last year that France would halve its 5,000-strong force fighting Islamists in the Sahel as part of his attempt to avoid “infinite war” in the region.
Mali’s rulers have criticised the French drawdown as “abandonment” but at the same time been highly critical of France and a multinational special forces group called the Takuba Task Force — set up by Paris to pursue the war against insurgents — for infringing its sovereignty. Recommended Mali How France lost Mali: failure to quell jihadi threat opens door to Russia Mali’s west African neighbours and the EU imposed severe economic sanctions on the country after the interim government proposed holding on to power until elections in 2025.
Denmark began withdrawing its special forces last month after being ordered to do so by Mali, and all western military operations in Mali are now in doubt.
Le Drian said there were now 1,000 mercenaries from Russia’s Wagner group in Mali, a country “run today by five colonels who have taken power”. He said: “It’s the junta that has cut itself off and lost the plot and which must accept the consequences.” Wagner mercenaries have been accused by the UN of gross human rights abuses and possible war crimes in Libya and the Central African Republic.
Mali’s August coup was the first in a string of putsches across west and central Africa as soldiers seized power in Chad, Guinea and Burkina Faso.
This article originally came from The Financial Times