It’s now clear that Western forces have failed to defeat terrorism in the strategic Sahel region
In January 2013, a ten-month-old armed rebellion led by jihadist groups affiliated with Al-Qaeda threatened to capture all of Mali. The Malian government turned to its former colonial overseer for help, and France dispatched some 3,500 troops which, along with another 1,900 from Chad and Niger, swiftly defeated the insurgency. Some three weeks later, French President Francois Hollande was feted as a conquering hero by crowds of cheering Malian citizens during a visit to the northern Malian city of Timbuktu, which French forces had just recaptured from rebel forces.
A decade later, Islamic terrorist groups, far from being defeated, have overrun the Sahel, spreading from Mali to Burkina Faso, Senegal, Cote d’Ivoire, Benin, and Togo. France, once viewed as liberators, has been asked by a Malian government that, nearly a decade after the French intervention, now views the French military as an occupying power, to remove its troops from Mali soil. French President Emmanuel Macron, on February 17, 2022, announced that France would be terminating Operation Barkhane, the name for the multi-national force led by French troops, that had been fighting Islamist insurgents in Mali and elsewhere in the Sahel for a little more than nine years.
The Mali government had grown weary of the French-led military campaign which had not only failed to bring the Islamists to heel but resulted in the deaths of thousands of Malian civilians in a losing effort. Iyad Ag Ghaly, the leader of the major Islamist group fighting in Mali, Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimeen (JNIM), has agreed to enter peace talks with the Mali government, but only on the condition that Operation Barkhane be terminated and the French-led forces sent back to their respective countries.
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One of the main reasons Islamic jihadism has flourished in the Sahel has been the inability of France and its allies to turn military victory into meaningful social reform. Political instability is the lifeblood of Islamic jihadism, and the Sahel has become the poster child for political chaos. By way of example, the five regional political leaders from Chad, Burkina Faso, Niger, Mauritania, and Mali, who originally backed the French intervention are no longer in power, victims of domestic political instability at home.
The United Nations, which deployed the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) on the coattails of the initial French military intervention in 2013, sought to promote security and stabilization in support of a national political dialogue leading to the reestablishment of State authority, the rebuilding of the security sector, and the promotion and protection of human rights. What it got instead was an endless conflict that has taken the lives of more than 200 UN peacekeepers and 6,000 Malian civilians killed in 2021 alone. This failure empowered the May 25, 2021, coup which put a military junta led by Colonel Assimi Goita in power; it was Goita who subsequently ordered the French to leave.
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