The shadow of Françafrique
Here too, a sequence of recent events provides some answers. The Nouakchott Summit in February 2021 was conceived as a follow-up to the Pau Summit held in January 2020, the latter of which was notable for resulting in the deployment of 600 additional soldiers in Operation Barkhane, the French military intervention in Mali (5,000 troops).
It was expected that the President would announce the withdrawal of these 600 additional troops at the Nouakchott Summit. It was also expected that Macron would state an intention to revise his country’s posture in the Sahel, as it is generally accepted that France’s presence cannot continue at its current level and in its current form. Neither of these expectations came to pass, confirming that alongside an ambitious and innovative Macron vis-à-vis a "global Africa", there is also a more old-school, cautious and realist Macron in the relationship with West and Central Africa - that of the "second African policy".
On this front, the French President has had to accept Alassane Ouattara’s decision to stand for re-election in Ivory Coast after he had pledged to retire from political life. Furthermore, it is likely that France will not be able to oppose the apparently inevitable dynastic successions of power in Cameroon or Congo-Brazzaville.
Yet these woes come from the very heart of France’s strategy in the Sahel. First, after President Idriss Déby of Chad died under very suspicious circumstances on April 19, 2021, Macron was the only Western head of state to attend the long-standing French ally’s funeral. This was a courageous move, but one that illustrates the dilemmas of the French presence in the region: France absolutely needs the Chadian army for the success of Operation Barkhane. It is therefore very difficult for France to disagree too strongly - Macron did so, but after initially appearing to show that he could live with it - with the purely dynastic succession of power that has commenced in Chad.
Another setback was Mali’s "coup d’état within a coup d’état" on May 24-25, leading to an even more direct accession to the presidency by Colonel Assimi Goïta, who had ousted President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta a few months earlier.
In an initial stage, joint operations between French and Malian forces have been suspended.
For Paris, the situation comes with many risks, one of which is that the military in power in Bamako will enter into negotiations with some of the jihadist groups that have killed French soldiers - and whose neutralization is the raison d’être of France’s military engagement in the region. Another risk would be endorsing a regime devoid of any legitimacy. A third risk - which is in fact already a reality - is that France’s lack of popularity in the Sahel increases and that the French intervention continues to be seen in public opinion as a pretext for covering up unspoken interests through complicity with local authoritarian regimes.
It’s probably with all these considerations in mind that on June 11, Macron took the extraordinary decision to declare an end to Operation Barkhane.
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