Jump to navigation

Burkina Faso

More European diplomatic dominoes fall as French ambassador is expelled from Ouagadogou

The military juntas in the Sahel are sidelining Europe's efforts on security in favour of Moscow's forces

When Burkina Faso's junta expelled France's ambassador, Luc Hallade, last week it reinforced the sense of failure of Europe's diplomatic and security policy in the region.

Ouagadougou's move, followed the lead of Mali's junta which declared France's ambassador to Bamako persona non grata last year. It comes less than two weeks after the UN humanitarian coordinator in Burkina Faso, Barbara Manzi, was declared persona non grata.

EU High Representative on Foreign Affairs, Josep Borrell, insists that the EU 'is not abandoning the Sahel' but is 'restructuring our presence' in the region. Yet the withdrawal of French, German and British troops started last year and playing out over the next twelve months will mean more reliance on traditional diplomacy and development aid as policy tools (AC Vol 63 No 4, France moves out of Mali and Vol 63 No 8, Disjointed force).

Last year, the German government stated that it would start pulling out troops by mid-2023 and completely withdraw its soldiers by May 2024; Britain says it plans to withdraw its contingent earlier than the planned exit date of December 2023.

The prevailing anti-French sentiment in the region, and the increasing influence of the Russian mercenary force, the Wagner Group, suggests that the EU and its member states may struggle to recover ground in the short term.

The EU has recently launched programmes aimed at tackling what the European Commission calls Russian 'disinformation' on social media in the Sahel. Officials in Brussels know that that Russia wants to expand its presence via the Wagner group in the Sahel. But there is little sign they have an effective policy to counter that.



Related Articles

France moves out of Mali

European governments are rethinking military plans in the Sahel ahead of the grand summit between the African Union and the EU

African and European officials have agreed to move the centre for counter-insurgency operations in the Sahel from Mali to Niger but questions remain about how to manage the...


Disjointed force

The demise of the G5 Sahel Joint Force looks imminent, according to authoritative sources. The force always had a slight presence in the anti-jihadist campaign in the Sahel,...


Palace coup could usher in Moscow's mercenaries

New leader Captain Traoré says security crisis forced his faction to seize power but it could work with Russia, Turkey or the US military

On 3 October, a day after he was confirmed in power in Ouagadougou, new military leader Captain Ibrahim Traoré told a sceptical audience that he understood the urgency...


Geopolitical fault lines

The United States wants to use its US-African leaders' summit in Washington DC from 13-15 December to reboot its relations with the continent and reports that over 45...


The coup-makers win the first round

Regional and international efforts to bring the axis of colonels to heel have floundered due to hubris and miscalculations. The jihadist insurgents will be the main beneficiaries

Bamako's expulsion of France's ambassador Joël Meyer has set the stage for another messy post-colonial confrontation. Yet it is the refusal by Colonel Assimi Goïta's regime to accept...