Mali’s Russian-Backed Security Approach Is a Lot Like France’s

Mali’s Russian-Backed Security Approach Is a Lot Like France’s
Interim Malian President Col. Assimi Goita shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of the Russia-Africa Summit, in St. Petersburg, Russia, July 27, 2023 (Tass photo by Mikhail Metzel via AP Images).

A brutal ambush in a sparsely populated district in the Sahel region of West Africa might seem a matter of peripheral concern to global leaders facing wave after wave of crisis these days. Yet as conflicts in very different parts of the world become intertwined through transnational alliances against shared enemies, an insurgent triumph in Mali’s far north could have strategic implications that resonate far beyond the arid borderlands of the Sahel.

The ambush in question took place near the town of Tinzaouaten in northeast Mali between July 22 and 27, when a large convoy of Malian troops and Russian mercenaries was destroyed by local insurgents. Though video images posted on social media show the wreckage of combat vehicles and dozens of Russians killed in action after the battle had ended, there is less clarity about how the fighting leading up to these scenes unfolded. While some reports suggest that Tuareg separatists initially intercepted the convoy, other video clips indicate that jihadist insurgents linked to the al-Qaida-affiliated JNIM movement wiped out the Russian and Malian forces that survived the initial round of fighting.

With Tuareg separatists as well as jihadists trying to claim credit for the attack, its long-term political impact will depend heavily on which faction moves more quickly to seize territory that an overstretched Malian government will no longer be able to secure.

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