Jump to navigation

Questions mount over Macron's regional plan

Although Paris wants to scale back its commitment to the Sahel operation, it's unclear which countries fill the gap

France's President Emmanuel Macron is likely to cut more troops from the region at next week's G5 Sahel summit in Chad on Monday and Tuesday (15 and 16 February). Officials have already said they will withdraw the extra 'surge' force of 600 soldiers, taking numbers down to 4,500 again. But they are also planning deeper cuts.

President Macron hopes that the new European Takuba Task Force will do more (AC Vol 62 No 2, Outstaying welcomes). Josep Borrell, the European Union's High Representative on foreign affairs, will attend the Chad summit, although there are no signs that he will come with more cash or troops from member states.

Macron is under electoral pressure at home to reduce France's troop commitment where his claims of successes are not widely shared. Some policy experts think the Sahel strategy is foundering amid more communal killings and jihadist militancy.

Last month, Macron met with Mali's interim leader Bah N'Daw at the Elysée palace. The growing unpopularity of France's military presence in Mali was thought to have been discussed.

N'Daw's caretaker government is meant to rule for 18 months before elections but the military has maintained its political influence since it deposed President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta in August (AC Vol 61 No 17, No road back for Keïta).

French senators say it is not enough to be told the government is withdrawing 600 soldiers from Opération Barkhane. 'Above all, we want to understand the government's strategy for the coming period,' said Christian Chambon, head of the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Armed Forces Committee in Paris.

There are also questions about how international development and support missions can be restarted. The UN's mission in Mali has been stalled by the Covid-19 pandemic while EU support missions for Malian and Nigérien security forces have also been put on hold.



Related Articles

    Vol 62 No 2 |
  • MALI

Outstaying welcomes

French President Emmanuel Macron's announcement on 19 January that he would be reviewing the deployment of soldiers to Opération Barkhane in the Sahel due to 'good results' in rece...


    Vol 61 No 17 |
  • MALI

No road back for Keïta

Mutinous soldiers have delivered the coup de grâce to a failing regime as envoys go through the motions of trying to restore the president

The pro forma condemnation by West African leaders of the overthrow of the hapless President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta on 18 August – not to mention the strong popular supp...


Going for Glencore

Swiss-based oil and commodities trader Glencore has become entangled in France's Angolagate scandal. Paris sources say an arrest warrant has been issued for one of the company's le...


The falling euro drags down the CFA franc

A relic of France’s African economic empire, the CFA zone must cope with the impact of Western Europe’s monetary disarray

The continuing crisis of the rich world’s financial system has thrown off balance the main surviving element of France’s African empire, the franc of the Communauté financière d’Af...