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Operation Barkhane

Operation Barkhane was a counterinsurgency operation that started on 1 August 2014 and formally ended on 9 November 2022. It was led by the French military against Islamist groups in Africa's Sahel region.[22] and consisted of a roughly 3,000-strong French force, which was permanently headquartered in N'Djamena, the capital of Chad.[1][15] The operation was led in co-operation with five countries, all of which are former French colonies that span the Sahel: Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger. Mali was a part of the operation until August 2022.[1] The countries are collectively referred to as the "G5 Sahel".[23] The operation was named after a crescent-shaped dune type that is common in the Sahara desert.[24]

Operation Barkhane
Part of the Mali War, the insurgency in the Sahel and the War on terror

French soldiers of the 126th Infantry Regiment and Malian soldiers, 17 March 2016.
Date1 August 2014[11] – 9 November 2022
(8 years, 3 months, 1 week and 1 day)
Location
Result

Failure of French forces in suppressing jihadists[12][13]

  • French forces withdraw from Mali in August 2022, with the operation being based in Niger[14]
  • France ends the operation in November 2022
Belligerents

 France
G5 Sahel

 Estonia[2][3]
 Sweden[4]
 Czech Republic[5]

Supported by:
 United Kingdom[6][7]
 Canada[8][9]
 United States[10]
 Denmark[3]
AQIM
Nusrat al-Islam
(2017–2022)
Al-Mourabitoun
(2014–17)
Ansar Dine
(2014–17)
IS-GS
(2015–2022)
Commanders and leaders

Emmanuel Macron
(President of France, from 2017)
Élisabeth Borne
(Prime Minister of France, from 2022)
Assimi Goïta
(President of Mali, from 2021)
Abdoulaye Maïga
(Prime Minister of Mali, from 2022)
Mohamed Bazoum
(President of Niger, from 2021)
Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou
(Prime Minister of Niger, from 2021)
Ibrahim Traoré
(President of Burkina Faso, from 2022)
Apollinaire Joachim Kyélem de Tambèla
(Prime Minister of Burkina Faso, from 2022)
Mohamed Ould Ghazouani
(President of Mauritania, from 2019)
Mohamed Ould Bilal
(Prime Minister of Mauritania, from 2020)
Mahamat Déby
(President of Chad, from 2021)
Saleh Kebzabo
(Prime Minister of Chad, from 2022)
Alar Karis
(President of Estonia, from 2021)
Kaja Kallas
(Prime Minister of Estonia, from 2021)
Charles III
(King of the United Kingdom, from 2022)
Rishi Sunak
(Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, from 2022)
Justin Trudeau
(Prime Minister of Canada, from 2015)
Joseph Biden
(President of the United States, from 2021)
Margrethe II
(Queen of Denmark, from 2014)
Mette Frederiksen
(Prime Minister of Denmark, from 2019)
Miloš Zeman
(President of the Czech Republic, from 2014)
Petr Fiala
(Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, from 2021)
Carl XVI Gustaf
(King of Sweden, from 2014)
Ulf Kristersson
(Prime Minister of Sweden, from 2022)

Iyad Ag Ghaly
Djamel Okacha  
Mokhtar Belmokhtar
Abdelmalek Droukdel  
Yahia Djouadi  
Adnan Abu Walid al-Sahrawi  
Oumeya Ould Albakaye  (POW)
Strength
3,000 troops (since 2022)[15]
5,500 troops (at peak)[15]
95 troops
90 troops
3 heavy lift helicopters
70 troops
2 heavy lift helicopters
150 troops
3 medium-lift helicopters, 1 C-130
6,000 fighters (all groups)[16]
Casualties and losses
53 killed[17]
6 wounded[18][19]
4 killed, 2 wounded[20]
2,800+ killed[21]
Unknown wounded and captured

The French military initially intervened in Mali in early 2013 as part of Operation Serval, which successfully regained the northern half of the country from Islamist groups. Operation Barkhane is intended to follow up to that success and has expanded the French military's operations over a vast area of the Sahel region. The operation has the stated aim of helping the countries' governments to maintain control of their territory and preventing the region from becoming a safe haven for Islamist terrorist groups that plan to attack France and Europe.[25]

On 24 May 2021, the 2021 Malian coup d'état was carried out by Vice President Assimi Goïta.[26] French President Emmanuel Macron announced in June 2021 that the operation would soon end and French forces would pull out in a phased manner, due to France's inability to work with the national governments in the Sahel region. He however added that French forces would remain in the region as part of a larger international mission.[27] The operation was later scheduled to end by the first quarter of 2022.[28]

France began withdrawing its troops from Mali on 17 February 2022.[29] Macron announced that the base of Barkhane will shift to Niger.[30] The military junta ruling Mali however asked France to withdraw without delay on 18 March, with Macron responding that they would withdraw over the next four to six months.[31] French forces fully withdrew from Mali on 15 August.[14] The French military stated that the operation was not ending, but being reformulated.[15] However on 9 November, Macron announced the end of Operation Barkhane.[12]

Background Edit

As part of the fallout from the Libyan Civil War, instability in northern Mali caused by a Tuareg rebellion against the central Malian government was exploited by Islamist groups who gained control over the northern half of the country. In response, France launched a military operation in January 2013 to stop the Islamist offensive from toppling the Malian government and to re-capture northern Mali.[32] The operation, codenamed Operation Serval, ended in the complete re-capture of all Islamist held territory by the operation's conclusion on 15 July 2014.

 
French soldiers and VBCIs patrolling near Gao, Mali as part of Operation Serval, in March 2013.

Following the end of Operation Serval, France recognised the need to provide stability in the wider Sahel region by helping the region's various governments combat terrorism. The former French Defense Minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said that France recognised that "there still is a major risk that jihadists develop in the area that runs from the Horn of Africa to Guinea-Bissau." Therefore, Operation Barkhane was launched in order to assure the Sahel nations' security, and in effect France's security.[23] The operation is the successor of Operation Serval, the French military mission in Mali,[24] and Operation Epervier, the mission in Chad.[33]

Aim Edit

The operation aims "to become the French pillar of counterterrorism in the Sahel region".[23] According to French Defence Minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, the main objective of Operation Barkhane is counter-terrorism:[22] "The aim is to prevent what I call the highway of all forms of traffics to become a place of permanent passage, where jihadist groups between Libya and the Atlantic Ocean can rebuild themselves, which would lead to serious consequences for our security."[34] The concept of 'partnership' has been emphasised to explain the deployment of the French troops. The main objective of the French military intervention is the direct support of the G5 Sahel forces, through training and the introduction of new technologies and resources.[35] Former French President, François Hollande, has said the Barkhane force will allow for a "rapid and efficient intervention in the event of a crisis" in the region.[24] The operation will target Islamist extremists in Mali, Chad, and Niger,[22] and will have a mandate to operate across borders.[22]

Forces committed Edit

French forces Edit

The French force was initially a 3,000-strong counter-terrorism force,[1] with 1,000 soldiers deployed indefinitely in Mali. These soldiers were to be focused on counter-terrorism operations in northern Mali, with another 1,200 soldiers stationed in Chad, and the remaining soldiers split between a surveillance base in Niger, a bigger permanent base in Ivory Coast, and some special forces in Burkina Faso.[1] According to original plans, the French forces were supplied with 20 helicopters, 200 armored vehicles, 10 transport aircraft, 6 fighter planes, and 3 drones.[1] French Army Aviation currently have two Aérospatiale SA 330 Pumas in Chad.[36]

 
The Sahel region

The division of labor between France and the G5 Sahel has been established by four permanent military bases:[23] (1) headquarters and an air force base in the Chadian capital of N'Djamena (under the leadership of French Général Palasset); (2) a regional base in Gao, north Mali, with at least 1,000 men; (3) a special-forces base in Burkina Faso's capital, Ouagadougou; (4) an intelligence base in Niger's capital, Niamey, with over 300 men. The Niamey airbase is strategically important because it hosts drones in charge of gathering intelligence across the entire Sahel-Saharan region.[23] From Niamey, France's troops are supported by two German Transall C-160s.[37] In 2020, France stated that it will deploy 600 soldiers in addition to the existing force to fight the Islamist militants in Africa's Sahel.[38]

The aviation support is provided the French Groupement Tactique Désert-Aérocombat.[39]

British support Edit

In March 2016, during the UK-France Summit in Paris, the British government announced that it would consider providing support to Operation Barkhane.[6] British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon then announced that the UK would provide monthly strategic airlift support to French forces in Africa.[7] In July 2018, three RAF Chinook helicopters arrived in Mali to provide logistical and troop movement support to French and other military forces operating in the area. This deployment is in addition to the 90 British troops already deployed in the region.[40] In September 2018, Forces.net reported that to date the RAF Chinooks Mk5s have made 30 sorties, transporting over 700 French troops, supplies and 70 tons of equipment across Mali.[41] In July 2020, the British Ministry of Defence announced that nearly 250 British Army troops would train and deploy to Mali to serve as a long-range reconnaissance force for United Nations forces.[42]

Estonia Edit

On 22 March 2018, the Ministry of Defence of Estonia announced its intention to commit up to 50 troops and 5 Pasi XA-188 armoured vehicles to Mali as part of Operation Barkhane, to be based in Gao, pending approval by the Riigikogu.[43][44] The unit, named ESTPLA-26 and headed by Maj. Kristjan Karist, was detached from the C Infantry Company of the Scouts Battalion on 6 August, and arrived in Mali that same week to be stationed at the French military base in Gao.[2][45] In November 2019, Estonia increased its Operation Barkhane troop deployment to 95 soldiers.[46]

Sweden Edit

The Swedish contribution to Barkhane via Task Force Takuba arrived in Mali during February 2021.[47] The Swedish troop contribution to Task Force Takuba is a 150-man strong helicopter-borne rapid-response force, centered around an SOG task unit and supported by three UH-60M helicopters and one C-130, ready to be deployed if something unforeseen occurs. The task force will also be used for other operations, as for example to support other countries that exercise and conduct operations with the Malian army.[48]

On 14 January 2022, the Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed Sweden's intention to withdraw Swedish forces from the European special forces mission in Sahel and reevaluate Swedish involvement in United Nations task force in Mali.[49]

Operations Edit

2014–2015: Beginning of Barkhane and insurgents regroup Edit

 
A French military helicopter over the Nigerien town Madama, which serves as a forward operating base for the French, Niger and Chad armies

Operations commenced 1 August 2014. French Forces sustained their first casualty during a battle in early November 2014, which also resulted in 24 jihadists dead.[50] On 24 November, a French special forces soldier was killed in a Caracal helicopter crash in Burkina Faso.[51] French forces experienced their first major success of Barkhane in December 2014 with the killing of Ahmed al-Tilemsi, the leader of the Al-Mourabitoun jihadist group, by French special forces during a raid in the deserts of northern Mali.[52]

From 7 to 14 April 2015, French and Nigerien forces carried out an airborne operation in the far north of Niger to search for Jihadists. As part of the operation, 90 French Army paratroopers of the 2e REP jumped near the Salvador pass. Two soldiers were injured during the jump before they were joined by a joint force of Nigerien and French soldiers from the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment (1er RHP).[53]

On 26 November 2015, a French Air Parachute Commando died in hospital in France as a result of his injuries after being hit by an anti-tank mine on 13 October near Tessalit during a reconnaissance mission.[54]

2016–2017: Insurgency intensifies Edit

French soldiers based in Mali as part of the Army Special Forces Command were rapidly deployed to Burkina Faso on 15 January 2016 after jihadists launched a terrorist attack on Ouagadougou which killed 30 people.[55] In February, French forces killed a number of insurgent fighters in the north of Mali, including a number of high ranking foreign jihadists from AQIM.[56]

On 12 April 2016, three French soldiers were killed when their armored personnel carrier struck a land mine. The convoy of about 60 vehicles was travelling to the northern desert town of Tessalit when it hit the mine.[57] Another French soldier was killed on 4 November 2016 following the explosion of a mine near the town of Abeïbara, which made 2016 the deadliest year up to that point for French forces participating in Barkhane.[58]

 
French soldiers from the Mountain Commando Group inspecting Malian travelers northeast of Gao in June 2017.

On 15 March 2017, French forces arrested eight jihadists in the desert north of Timbuktu.[59] On 5 April 2017, master corporal Julien Barbé,[60] was killed in action near Hombori after an explosive device blew up an armoured vehicle.[61] He was posthumously made a knight of the Legion of Honour.[60] Heavy fighting between French forces and Jihadist groups continued into the summer of 2017, with 8 French soldiers being wounded by a mortar attack on their base in Timbuktu on 1 June.[62] On the night of 17 June, France suffered its tenth soldier killed during an airborne operation in the north-east of Mali.[63]

On 4 October 2017, French forces operating as part of Barkhane were the first to respond to the ambush of American soldiers searching for an Islamic State commander on the Niger-Mali border. French air support was requested by the Americans and two hours later Mirage fighter jets arrived from Niamey. Despite the French pilots being unable to engage ground targets due to the proximity of friendly forces, the jets deterrence was enough to end the ambush.[64] A French special forces team were the first ground forces to reach the scene of the ambush, 3–4 hours after the firefight which resulted in the death of 4 American Green Berets.[65]

On 14 October 2017, an Antonov An-26 aircraft operating in support of Operation Barkhane crashed shortly before landing at Félix Houphouët Boigny International Airport, Abidjan, Ivory Coast.[66] Four Moldovan flight crew were killed. Two Moldovan flight crew and four French Army soldiers were injured.[67]

2018–2020: Increased violence across the Sahel and French troop surge Edit

 
A heavily damaged French VBCI armoured vehicle burns after an attack on a French patrol in the city of Gao.

A French Army convoy was attacked on 11 January 2018, by a suicide car bomb while driving between the towns of Idelimane and Menaka. Three French soldiers were wounded, one seriously, in the attack which was later claimed by Islamic State in the Greater Sahara.[68] On 14 February, a French airstrike killed at least 10 Jihadists at the border between Algeria and Mali.[69] Two French soldiers from the 1st Spahi Regiment were killed and the Colonel-in-chief was wounded on 21 February when the armoured vehicle they were travelling in struck a mine between the towns of Gao and Menaka.[70]

On 14 April 2018, JNIM militants launched an attack on a UN base in Timbuktu, wounding several French soldiers before being repelled by French, Malian and American troops.[71] Four French soldiers were seriously wounded by a suicide car bomb attack against a joint French-Malian patrol in Gao on 1 July 2018.[72] The attack, which heavily damaged a number of French VBCIs, also killed 4 civilians and seriously wounded 27 others.[73]

On 22 February 2019, French forces backed by an armed reaper drone and a helicopter attacked a JNIM convoy killing 11 militants including senior leader Yahia Abou el Hamman in the Tombouctou Region of Mali.[74][75] A militant improvised explosive device struck a French armoured vehicle carrying out an anti-terrorist operation in the Mopti Region on 2 April, killing one French soldier and seriously wounding another.[76] Two French commandos of the Commandos Marine were killed on 9 May in the North of Burkina Faso during a rescue mission which successfully rescued four hostages, included two Frenchmen, and an American and South Korean woman, who had been kidnapped by Islamists.[77]

 
A British aircraft technician servicing a Royal Air Force Chinook helicopter operating out of Gao, Mali in support of Operation Serval.

In mid-June 2019, a French Army Light Aviation Gazelle helicopter crashed in the border region between Mali and Niger after being fired upon by insurgent small arms fire. The two pilots and a special forces sniper were subsequently rescued by another helicopter after destroying the damaged helicopter.[78] The French military base in Gao was assaulted by suicide bombers on 22 July in an attack that wounded 6 Estonian soldiers and a similar number of French personnel.[79] A French soldier was killed on 2 November 2019 when his vehicle was struck by an improvised explosive device during a patrol near Menaka in eastern Mali.[80] French commandos launched a heli-borne raid later that month on an insurgent camp in Mali's eastern regions, which resulted in five insurgents killed and one French soldier being seriously injured.[81]

On 25 November 2019, 13 French soldiers were killed in northern Mali when two French helicopters, a 'Tigre' and a 'Cougar', collided in mid-air while flying to reinforce soldiers engaged in combat with insurgents.[82] The loss of 13 soldiers was the heaviest loss of life for the French military since the 1983 Beirut barracks bombings.[83]

On 21 December 2019, the French military killed 40 militants in an operation in the Mopti Region of Mali. The area where the operation took place was controlled by Macina Liberation Front and it involved France's first ever use of a drone strike which accounted for 7 of the 40 killed insurgents.[84]

The French Defense Minister Florence Parly announced in February 2020 that France would send an additional 600 troops to the Sahel region, bolstering Operation Barkhanes' force to 5,100 troops.[85] The first contingent of these reinforcements was 200 French Army paratroopers from the 2e REP who were transported to Niger and formed a battle group called Desert Tactical Grouping (GTD) "Altor". This battle group operated autonomously and without a base on the ground for over a month, receiving supplies only by airdrop. GTD Altor killed over a dozen insurgents and disrupted their logistics throughout their initial month-long operation.[86]

Two soldiers from the 1st Foreign Cavalry Regiment (1er REC) were seriously wounded when their vehicle struck an IED during operations against insurgents on 23 April 2020; one of the soldier subsequently died from his wounds.[87] On 4 May 2020, a second soldier from the 1er REC was killed in action near Gao during a firefight with an insurgent force.[88]

On 3 June, French forces achieved one of their most significant successes of Operation Barkhane with the killing of Abdelmalek Droukdel, the leader of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). French and American intelligence sources had identified Droukdel's presence in a group crossing the Algerian-Malian border approximately 80 kilometres east of the town of Tessalit. French special forces subsequently conducted an air assault to intercept the group during which they shot and killed Droukdel and a number of other militants.[89]

A French soldier from the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment (1er RHP) was killed during combat operations in Mali on 23 July 2020 when an improvised explosive device was triggered next to his armoured vehicle.[90] Two further paratroopers from the 1er RHP were killed on 5 September 2020 by an improvised explosive device which struck their vehicle during an operation in the north of Mali.[91] On 31 October 2020, French special Forces launched an operation near the town of Boulikessi near the border of Mali and Burkina Faso, 50 jihadists were killed and four were captured. On 10 November 2020, Ba Ag Moussa, Emir of Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin, along with 4 other militants were killed in an attack carried out by French Special forces.[92][93][94] On 12 November 2020, French Mountains commandos operating under Barkhane killed 30 jihadists in Central Mali.[95] On 30 November 2020, insurgents launched a coordinated attack on three separate French military bases in Kidal, Menaka and Gao in northern Mali using indirect rocket fire but French forces reported no casualties as a result of the attacks.[96] A French military convoy consisting of the 1er Régiment de Chasseurs (1er RCh) was struck by two IED blasts in quick succession on 28 December 2020 during an operation in the Hombori region in central Mali, resulting in the death of three soldiers.[97][98]

2021–2022: French withdrawal Edit

On 2 January 2021, two French soldiers from the 2nd Hussar Regiment (2e RH) were killed while taking part in an intelligence gathering mission in northeastern Mali.[99] Six French soldiers were wounded on 10 January when a suicide bomber attacked their convoy during a patrol in the central region near Gourma.[100] French and Malian forces conducted a joint offensive operation named Operation Eclipse [fr] from 2 to 20 January in the forests surrounding the town of Boni. Over 100 jihadists were killed and 20 captured by French forces during the course of Operation Eclipse.[101]

French forces carried out a controversial airstrike during the course of Operation Eclipse which locals claimed targeted a wedding ceremony in the village of Bounti, in the central Mopti region, on 3 January.[102] The French military denied these claims and asserted that the strike had successfully targeted a group of jihadist fighters.[103]

France announced it had suspended joint military operations with Mali on 3 June, in response to the coup d'état carried out by the Malian military, resulting in the deposition of the interim president Bah Ndaw and Prime Minister Moctar Ouane in May.[104]

The president of France Emmanuel Macron announced on 10 June that the operation would soon be coming to an end and instead be replaced by a mission involving forces from more countries. He also added that the French forces will withdraw in a phased manner, but some will remain as part of another international mission, for which France would convince other countries to join. As to the reason for the withdrawal, he stated that France could not continue to work with the national governments in the Sahel region, as they were negotiating with terrorists.[105]

On 2 July, France announced that it would resume its suspended joint military operations with Mali, following discussions with the interim government of the country.[106]

On 9 July, Macron stated that France will withdraw between 2,500–3,000 troops from the Sahel, while retaining other troops to thwart militant operations and supporting regional forces.[107] On 13 July, he announced that Barkhane would end in the first quarter of 2022.[28]

On 15 September, Macron announced that Barkhane forces had killed Adnan Abu Walid al-Sahrawi, the leader of Islamic State in the Greater Sahara.[108] The assassination was conducted on 17 August using a drone in the Dangalous Forest of Mali near the border with Niger, according to the Chief of the Defence Staff Thierry Burkhard, after gathering information on locations where al-Sahrawi was likely to hide from captured IS-GS members. Burkhard added that al-Sahrawi was travelling on a motorcycle with another person when he was killed. A unit comprising 20 soldiers of the French Army's special forces was then sent to confirm the identities of those killed and found that the strike had killed ten IS-GS members.[109]

On 24 September, a French soldier was killed in an armed clash with insurgents in Mali, close to the border with Burkina Faso.[110]

As of 2021, Operation Barkhane cost about 1 billion per year.[111]

On 11 February, the French Army anncounced that it killed 40 militants in airstrikes on a motorcycle column in the W National Park area in cooperation with the Burkinabe forces on the previous day. The militants had carried out two armed attacks in Benin on 8 and 9 February, killing nine people.[112]

France along with its European allies announced the beginning of the withdrawal of troops from Mali on 17 February, blaming the military junta of Mali for obstructions in carrying out their military operations. France stated that the withdrawal was meant for its soldiers part of both Operation Barkhane and Takuba Task Force.[29] Macron stated that the base of the operation would shift from Mali to Niger.[30] France began redeploying its forces to other countries of the Sahel like Chad.[113]

The French military stated on 7 March 2022 that its forces had killed al-Qaeda commander Yahia Djouadi, alias "Abu Ammar al-Jazairi", overnight between 25–26 February. Djouadi was a former emir of the group in Libya before fleeing to Mali in 2019. He helped organize the group, in addition to managing its supplies, logistics and finances in the Tombouctou Region.[114]

On 18 March, the military government of Mali asked France to withdraw its troops "without delay". President Macron however responded that about 5,000 French troops will leave Mali in an "orderly fashion" over the next four to six months, in order to provide protection for the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) and forces of other nations stationed in Mali.[31]

France announced on 15 June that it had captured Oumeya Ould Albakaye, a senior ISGS leader in Mali overnight between 11–12 June.[115] On the following day, it stated that nearly 40 militants were killed in drone strikes on a column of motorcycles near Niger's border with Burkina Faso on 14 June.[116][117]

French forces completed their withdrawal from Mali on 15 August.[14] The French military stated that 3,000 troops will remain in the Sahel region as part of Operation Barkhane and added that it was not ending, but being reformulated.[15] However on November 9, Macron announced the end of Operation Barkhane and stated that some French troops will remain in the region under new arrangements.[12]

Casualties Edit

French forces Edit

 
French troops of the 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment (35e RAP) board a helicopter during a mission.

Prior to the beginning of Operation Barkhane, 10 French troops had been killed in Mali as part of Operation Serval.[118] Since the launch of Operation Barkhane in August 2014, the French Ministère des Armées listed 38 servicemen were reported killed in Mali, 2 in Burkina Faso and one in Chad.[119] The vast distances of Operation Barkhane force's area of operations across the Sahel pose a significant challenge in dealing with French casualties, with wounded troops being possibly up to 1,100 km (680 mi) from advanced medical aid. To overcome these challenges, the French military created helicopter-mobile medical teams which can rapidly carry out MEDEVAC missions and transport casualties to more advanced medical care. Between 2013 and 2016, it was reported that French forces sustained 1,272 casualties which required MEDEVAC; of these casualties, 18.2% were wounded in action, 27.4% suffered trauma injuries and 46.6% were suffering from disease or sickness.[120]

Insurgent forces Edit

After the first year of operations, the French Army claimed that approximately 125 insurgents had been neutralized by French forces.[121] In late 2015, French army representatives indicated that over 150 ammunition and explosive depositories had been discovered and 25 vehicles and 80 electronic devices (GPS, computers, satellite phones and radio stations) had been destroyed. This represented 20 tons of ammunition, including 2,000 shells, 680 grenades, guided missiles, 25 IEDs and mines, 210 detonators, 30 mortars, machine guns and rocket launchers. The army also seized 3,500 kg (7,700 lb) of various drugs. French forces continued to inflict significant casualties in 2016, with nearly 150 insurgents killed or captured in that year.[122] By July 2017, the French Forces estimated that over 400 insurgents had been killed since the start of Operation Barkhane.[123]

In February 2018, the French Defense Minister, Florence Parly, indicated that 450 jihadists have been neutralized, amongst which 120 have been killed and 150 held as prisoners by Malian authorities. In July 2018, General Bruno Guibert, head of the Barkhane force, confirmed that 120 terrorists had been killed since the beginning of the year. In February 2019, Parly announced that over 600 jihadists had been "neutralized" since the beginning of the operation in 2014.[124]

Opinions and opposition Edit

Divided opinions Edit

Since 2013 and the beginning of the Operation Serval, replaced by Operation Barkhane in 2014, opinions in Mali have been divided as to the legitimacy of the French intervention. According to Mission head for Peace in Mali for the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Aurélien Tobie, "Between 2013 and 2015, we quickly realised, after the peace agreements in Ouagadougou and Algiers for Mali that the Malian opinion towards the French presence was changing. People were supporting the Serval Operation, but did not understand why the French presence was being prolonged with the Barkhane Operation".[125]

In 2017, the study "Mali-Meter", conducted by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation in Mali, polled the level of satisfaction with Operation Barkhane amongst the Malian population.[126] Less than half of the respondents were satisfied with the French intervention. The study also showed geographical disparities in approbation of Operation Barkhane.[126]

According to Aurélien Tobie, the differences of opinion between the North and the South of the country can be explained by the difference in proximity of the population with the operations: "People in contact with the forces of Barkhane in the North of the country approve of it much more because they see changes in their daily lives. Conversely, people interviewed in Southern Mali, who are generally higher educated but also further away from the conflict zone, are much more critical of the French presence".[125]

Demonstrations against the French presence have been taking place since 2013 in Mali, on a regular basis.[127] Patriotic groups have been emerging.[128] These groups strive for an end of the French presence and some call for a Russian intervention.[128]

In June 2019, a former Malian minister anonymously declared to French newspaper Libération that anti-French sentiment is at its peak in Mali: "Conspiracy theories are flourishing everywhere. Soon, France will be accused of being responsible for the floods. The inertia of our own leaders is the primary cause of the problem".[129]

Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita also strongly criticised anti-French demonstrations. He stated in December 2019 that: "the foreign forces in our country are our allies in this tragic war imposed on us. We will not win this war by misunderstanding who our true enemy is and by falling into the trap of the terrorist groups".[130]

French President Emmanuel Macron has denounced a "disinformation campaign" led by a rival power, implying it was Russia, although he did not explicitly name it.[131]

On August 7, 2023, 94 French senators sent an open letter to President Emmanuel Macron in which they regretted "the failure of Operation Barkhane" and "the erasure of France" in Africa. The signatories, led by LR Roger Karoutchi, Bruno Retailleau and Christian Cambon, ask the president to review his strategy.[132]

Françafrique Edit

Much of the criticism of the French intervention revolves around the concept of Françafrique, a pejorative term used to describe the alleged neocolonial practices of France in its former African colonies.[133]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "François Hollande's African adventures: The French are reorganising security in an increasingly troubled region". Economist. 21 July 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Gallery: Estonian platoon enters service in Mali". Eesti Rahvusringhääling. 10 August 2018. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b . fmn.dk. Archived from the original on 26 September 2020. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  4. ^ Forces, Swedish Armed. "Swedish Special Forces to Mali". Försvarsmakten. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  5. ^ Maclean, Ruth; O'Reilly, Finbarr (29 March 2020). "Crisis in the Sahel Becoming France's Forever War". The New York Times.
  6. ^ a b "UK-France Summit 3rd March 2016 – Annex on security and defence" (PDF). Ministry of Defence. 3 March 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  7. ^ a b "Defence Secretary secures progress on Brimstone sales as unmanned aircraft project moves forward". Ministry of Defence. 3 March 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2016. And he committed the UK to providing one strategic airlift flight a month to support French forces in their operations against terrorists in Africa.
  8. ^ "Operation FREQUENCE". Forces.gc.ca. National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces. 20 February 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  9. ^ . Government of Canada. National Defence / Canadian Armed Forces. 11 November 2016. Archived from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  10. ^ "Operation FREQUENCE". army.mil. US Army. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
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Further reading Edit

  • Erforth, Benedikt. (2020) "Multilateralism as a tool: Exploring French military cooperation in the Sahel." Journal of Strategic Studies
  • Carfantan, C.; Goudard, Y.; Butin, C.; Duron-Martinaud, S.; Even, J.P.; Anselme, A.; Dulaurent, E.; Géhant, M.; Vitalis, V.; Bay, C.; Bancarel, J. (4 November 2016). "Forward medevac during Serval and Barkhane operations in Sahel: a registry study". Injury. 48 (1): 58–63. doi:10.1016/j.injury.2016.10.043. PMID 27829492.

operation, barkhane, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, french, november, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, french, article, machine, translation, like, . You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French November 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Operation Barkhane see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fr Operation Barkhane to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Operation Barkhane was a counterinsurgency operation that started on 1 August 2014 and formally ended on 9 November 2022 It was led by the French military against Islamist groups in Africa s Sahel region 22 and consisted of a roughly 3 000 strong French force which was permanently headquartered in N Djamena the capital of Chad 1 15 The operation was led in co operation with five countries all of which are former French colonies that span the Sahel Burkina Faso Chad Mali Mauritania and Niger Mali was a part of the operation until August 2022 1 The countries are collectively referred to as the G5 Sahel 23 The operation was named after a crescent shaped dune type that is common in the Sahara desert 24 Operation BarkhanePart of the Mali War the insurgency in the Sahel and the War on terrorFrench soldiers of the 126th Infantry Regiment and Malian soldiers 17 March 2016 Date1 August 2014 11 9 November 2022 8 years 3 months 1 week and 1 day LocationSahel Mauritania Mali Burkina Faso Niger and ChadResultFailure of French forces in suppressing jihadists 12 13 French forces withdraw from Mali in August 2022 with the operation being based in Niger 14 France ends the operation in November 2022Belligerents France G5 Sahel Burkina Faso Chad Mali until August 2022 1 Mauritania Niger Estonia 2 3 Sweden 4 Czech Republic 5 Supported by United Kingdom 6 7 Canada 8 9 United States 10 Denmark 3 AQIM Nusrat al Islam 2017 2022 Al Mourabitoun 2014 17 Ansar Dine 2014 17 IS GS 2015 2022 Commanders and leadersEmmanuel Macron President of France from 2017 Elisabeth Borne Prime Minister of France from 2022 Assimi Goita President of Mali from 2021 Abdoulaye Maiga Prime Minister of Mali from 2022 Mohamed Bazoum President of Niger from 2021 Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou Prime Minister of Niger from 2021 Ibrahim Traore President of Burkina Faso from 2022 Apollinaire Joachim Kyelem de Tambela Prime Minister of Burkina Faso from 2022 Mohamed Ould Ghazouani President of Mauritania from 2019 Mohamed Ould Bilal Prime Minister of Mauritania from 2020 Mahamat Deby President of Chad from 2021 Saleh Kebzabo Prime Minister of Chad from 2022 Alar Karis President of Estonia from 2021 Kaja Kallas Prime Minister of Estonia from 2021 Charles III King of the United Kingdom from 2022 Rishi Sunak Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 2022 Justin Trudeau Prime Minister of Canada from 2015 Joseph Biden President of the United States from 2021 Margrethe II Queen of Denmark from 2014 Mette Frederiksen Prime Minister of Denmark from 2019 Milos Zeman President of the Czech Republic from 2014 Petr Fiala Prime Minister of the Czech Republic from 2021 Carl XVI Gustaf King of Sweden from 2014 Ulf Kristersson Prime Minister of Sweden from 2022 Former Francois HollandeManuel VallsBernard CazeneuveEdouard PhilippeJean CastexIbrahim Boubacar KeitaBah NdawMoussa MaraModibo KeitaAbdoulaye Idrissa MaigaSoumeylou Boubeye MaigaBoubou CisseMoctar OuaneChoguel Kokalla MaigaMahamadou IssoufouBrigi RafiniBlaise CompaoreHonore TraoreYacouba Isaac ZidaMichel KafandoGilbert DiendereCherif SyRoch Marc Christian KaborePaul Henri Sandaogo DamibaLuc Adolphe TiaoYacouba Isaac ZidaPaul Kaba ThiebaChristophe Joseph Marie DabireLassina ZerboAlbert OuedraogoMohamed Ould Abdel AzizMoulaye Ould Mohamed LaghdafYahya Ould HademineMohamed Salem Ould BechirIsmail Ould Bedde Ould Cheikh SidiyaIdriss Deby Kalzeubet Pahimi DeubetAlbert Pahimi PadackeKersti KaljulaidToomas Hendrik IlvesTaavi RoivasJuri RatasElizabeth IIDavid CameronTheresa MayBoris JohnsonLiz TrussStephen HarperBarack ObamaDonald TrumpHelle Thorning SchmidtLars Lokke RasmussenBohuslav SobotkaAndrej BabisFredrik ReinfeldtStefan LofvenMagdalena AnderssonIyad Ag Ghaly Djamel Okacha Mokhtar Belmokhtar Abdelmalek Droukdel Yahia Djouadi Adnan Abu Walid al Sahrawi Oumeya Ould Albakaye POW Strength3 000 troops since 2022 15 5 500 troops at peak 15 95 troops 90 troops3 heavy lift helicopters 70 troops 2 heavy lift helicopters 150 troops 3 medium lift helicopters 1 C 1306 000 fighters all groups 16 Casualties and losses53 killed 17 6 wounded 18 19 4 killed 2 wounded 20 2 800 killed 21 Unknown wounded and capturedThe French military initially intervened in Mali in early 2013 as part of Operation Serval which successfully regained the northern half of the country from Islamist groups Operation Barkhane is intended to follow up to that success and has expanded the French military s operations over a vast area of the Sahel region The operation has the stated aim of helping the countries governments to maintain control of their territory and preventing the region from becoming a safe haven for Islamist terrorist groups that plan to attack France and Europe 25 On 24 May 2021 the 2021 Malian coup d etat was carried out by Vice President Assimi Goita 26 French President Emmanuel Macron announced in June 2021 that the operation would soon end and French forces would pull out in a phased manner due to France s inability to work with the national governments in the Sahel region He however added that French forces would remain in the region as part of a larger international mission 27 The operation was later scheduled to end by the first quarter of 2022 28 France began withdrawing its troops from Mali on 17 February 2022 29 Macron announced that the base of Barkhane will shift to Niger 30 The military junta ruling Mali however asked France to withdraw without delay on 18 March with Macron responding that they would withdraw over the next four to six months 31 French forces fully withdrew from Mali on 15 August 14 The French military stated that the operation was not ending but being reformulated 15 However on 9 November Macron announced the end of Operation Barkhane 12 Contents 1 Background 2 Aim 3 Forces committed 3 1 French forces 3 2 British support 3 3 Estonia 3 4 Sweden 4 Operations 4 1 2014 2015 Beginning of Barkhane and insurgents regroup 4 2 2016 2017 Insurgency intensifies 4 3 2018 2020 Increased violence across the Sahel and French troop surge 4 4 2021 2022 French withdrawal 5 Casualties 5 1 French forces 5 2 Insurgent forces 6 Opinions and opposition 6 1 Divided opinions 6 2 Francafrique 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further readingBackground EditAs part of the fallout from the Libyan Civil War instability in northern Mali caused by a Tuareg rebellion against the central Malian government was exploited by Islamist groups who gained control over the northern half of the country In response France launched a military operation in January 2013 to stop the Islamist offensive from toppling the Malian government and to re capture northern Mali 32 The operation codenamed Operation Serval ended in the complete re capture of all Islamist held territory by the operation s conclusion on 15 July 2014 nbsp French soldiers and VBCIs patrolling near Gao Mali as part of Operation Serval in March 2013 Following the end of Operation Serval France recognised the need to provide stability in the wider Sahel region by helping the region s various governments combat terrorism The former French Defense Minister Jean Yves Le Drian said that France recognised that there still is a major risk that jihadists develop in the area that runs from the Horn of Africa to Guinea Bissau Therefore Operation Barkhane was launched in order to assure the Sahel nations security and in effect France s security 23 The operation is the successor of Operation Serval the French military mission in Mali 24 and Operation Epervier the mission in Chad 33 Aim EditThe operation aims to become the French pillar of counterterrorism in the Sahel region 23 According to French Defence Minister Jean Yves Le Drian the main objective of Operation Barkhane is counter terrorism 22 The aim is to prevent what I call the highway of all forms of traffics to become a place of permanent passage where jihadist groups between Libya and the Atlantic Ocean can rebuild themselves which would lead to serious consequences for our security 34 The concept of partnership has been emphasised to explain the deployment of the French troops The main objective of the French military intervention is the direct support of the G5 Sahel forces through training and the introduction of new technologies and resources 35 Former French President Francois Hollande has said the Barkhane force will allow for a rapid and efficient intervention in the event of a crisis in the region 24 The operation will target Islamist extremists in Mali Chad and Niger 22 and will have a mandate to operate across borders 22 Forces committed EditFrench forces Edit The French force was initially a 3 000 strong counter terrorism force 1 with 1 000 soldiers deployed indefinitely in Mali These soldiers were to be focused on counter terrorism operations in northern Mali with another 1 200 soldiers stationed in Chad and the remaining soldiers split between a surveillance base in Niger a bigger permanent base in Ivory Coast and some special forces in Burkina Faso 1 According to original plans the French forces were supplied with 20 helicopters 200 armored vehicles 10 transport aircraft 6 fighter planes and 3 drones 1 French Army Aviation currently have two Aerospatiale SA 330 Pumas in Chad 36 nbsp The Sahel regionThe division of labor between France and the G5 Sahel has been established by four permanent military bases 23 1 headquarters and an air force base in the Chadian capital of N Djamena under the leadership of French General Palasset 2 a regional base in Gao north Mali with at least 1 000 men 3 a special forces base in Burkina Faso s capital Ouagadougou 4 an intelligence base in Niger s capital Niamey with over 300 men The Niamey airbase is strategically important because it hosts drones in charge of gathering intelligence across the entire Sahel Saharan region 23 From Niamey France s troops are supported by two German Transall C 160s 37 In 2020 France stated that it will deploy 600 soldiers in addition to the existing force to fight the Islamist militants in Africa s Sahel 38 The aviation support is provided the French Groupement Tactique Desert Aerocombat 39 British support Edit Main article Operation Newcombe In March 2016 during the UK France Summit in Paris the British government announced that it would consider providing support to Operation Barkhane 6 British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon then announced that the UK would provide monthly strategic airlift support to French forces in Africa 7 In July 2018 three RAF Chinook helicopters arrived in Mali to provide logistical and troop movement support to French and other military forces operating in the area This deployment is in addition to the 90 British troops already deployed in the region 40 In September 2018 Forces net reported that to date the RAF Chinooks Mk5s have made 30 sorties transporting over 700 French troops supplies and 70 tons of equipment across Mali 41 In July 2020 the British Ministry of Defence announced that nearly 250 British Army troops would train and deploy to Mali to serve as a long range reconnaissance force for United Nations forces 42 Estonia Edit On 22 March 2018 the Ministry of Defence of Estonia announced its intention to commit up to 50 troops and 5 Pasi XA 188 armoured vehicles to Mali as part of Operation Barkhane to be based in Gao pending approval by the Riigikogu 43 44 The unit named ESTPLA 26 and headed by Maj Kristjan Karist was detached from the C Infantry Company of the Scouts Battalion on 6 August and arrived in Mali that same week to be stationed at the French military base in Gao 2 45 In November 2019 Estonia increased its Operation Barkhane troop deployment to 95 soldiers 46 Sweden Edit The Swedish contribution to Barkhane via Task Force Takuba arrived in Mali during February 2021 47 The Swedish troop contribution to Task Force Takuba is a 150 man strong helicopter borne rapid response force centered around an SOG task unit and supported by three UH 60M helicopters and one C 130 ready to be deployed if something unforeseen occurs The task force will also be used for other operations as for example to support other countries that exercise and conduct operations with the Malian army 48 On 14 January 2022 the Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed Sweden s intention to withdraw Swedish forces from the European special forces mission in Sahel and reevaluate Swedish involvement in United Nations task force in Mali 49 Operations Edit2014 2015 Beginning of Barkhane and insurgents regroup Edit nbsp A French military helicopter over the Nigerien town Madama which serves as a forward operating base for the French Niger and Chad armiesOperations commenced 1 August 2014 French Forces sustained their first casualty during a battle in early November 2014 which also resulted in 24 jihadists dead 50 On 24 November a French special forces soldier was killed in a Caracal helicopter crash in Burkina Faso 51 French forces experienced their first major success of Barkhane in December 2014 with the killing of Ahmed al Tilemsi the leader of the Al Mourabitoun jihadist group by French special forces during a raid in the deserts of northern Mali 52 From 7 to 14 April 2015 French and Nigerien forces carried out an airborne operation in the far north of Niger to search for Jihadists As part of the operation 90 French Army paratroopers of the 2e REP jumped near the Salvador pass Two soldiers were injured during the jump before they were joined by a joint force of Nigerien and French soldiers from the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment 1er RHP 53 On 26 November 2015 a French Air Parachute Commando died in hospital in France as a result of his injuries after being hit by an anti tank mine on 13 October near Tessalit during a reconnaissance mission 54 2016 2017 Insurgency intensifies Edit French soldiers based in Mali as part of the Army Special Forces Command were rapidly deployed to Burkina Faso on 15 January 2016 after jihadists launched a terrorist attack on Ouagadougou which killed 30 people 55 In February French forces killed a number of insurgent fighters in the north of Mali including a number of high ranking foreign jihadists from AQIM 56 On 12 April 2016 three French soldiers were killed when their armored personnel carrier struck a land mine The convoy of about 60 vehicles was travelling to the northern desert town of Tessalit when it hit the mine 57 Another French soldier was killed on 4 November 2016 following the explosion of a mine near the town of Abeibara which made 2016 the deadliest year up to that point for French forces participating in Barkhane 58 nbsp French soldiers from the Mountain Commando Group inspecting Malian travelers northeast of Gao in June 2017 On 15 March 2017 French forces arrested eight jihadists in the desert north of Timbuktu 59 On 5 April 2017 master corporal Julien Barbe 60 was killed in action near Hombori after an explosive device blew up an armoured vehicle 61 He was posthumously made a knight of the Legion of Honour 60 Heavy fighting between French forces and Jihadist groups continued into the summer of 2017 with 8 French soldiers being wounded by a mortar attack on their base in Timbuktu on 1 June 62 On the night of 17 June France suffered its tenth soldier killed during an airborne operation in the north east of Mali 63 On 4 October 2017 French forces operating as part of Barkhane were the first to respond to the ambush of American soldiers searching for an Islamic State commander on the Niger Mali border French air support was requested by the Americans and two hours later Mirage fighter jets arrived from Niamey Despite the French pilots being unable to engage ground targets due to the proximity of friendly forces the jets deterrence was enough to end the ambush 64 A French special forces team were the first ground forces to reach the scene of the ambush 3 4 hours after the firefight which resulted in the death of 4 American Green Berets 65 On 14 October 2017 an Antonov An 26 aircraft operating in support of Operation Barkhane crashed shortly before landing at Felix Houphouet Boigny International Airport Abidjan Ivory Coast 66 Four Moldovan flight crew were killed Two Moldovan flight crew and four French Army soldiers were injured 67 2018 2020 Increased violence across the Sahel and French troop surge Edit nbsp A heavily damaged French VBCI armoured vehicle burns after an attack on a French patrol in the city of Gao A French Army convoy was attacked on 11 January 2018 by a suicide car bomb while driving between the towns of Idelimane and Menaka Three French soldiers were wounded one seriously in the attack which was later claimed by Islamic State in the Greater Sahara 68 On 14 February a French airstrike killed at least 10 Jihadists at the border between Algeria and Mali 69 Two French soldiers from the 1st Spahi Regiment were killed and the Colonel in chief was wounded on 21 February when the armoured vehicle they were travelling in struck a mine between the towns of Gao and Menaka 70 On 14 April 2018 JNIM militants launched an attack on a UN base in Timbuktu wounding several French soldiers before being repelled by French Malian and American troops 71 Four French soldiers were seriously wounded by a suicide car bomb attack against a joint French Malian patrol in Gao on 1 July 2018 72 The attack which heavily damaged a number of French VBCIs also killed 4 civilians and seriously wounded 27 others 73 On 22 February 2019 French forces backed by an armed reaper drone and a helicopter attacked a JNIM convoy killing 11 militants including senior leader Yahia Abou el Hamman in the Tombouctou Region of Mali 74 75 A militant improvised explosive device struck a French armoured vehicle carrying out an anti terrorist operation in the Mopti Region on 2 April killing one French soldier and seriously wounding another 76 Two French commandos of the Commandos Marine were killed on 9 May in the North of Burkina Faso during a rescue mission which successfully rescued four hostages included two Frenchmen and an American and South Korean woman who had been kidnapped by Islamists 77 nbsp A British aircraft technician servicing a Royal Air Force Chinook helicopter operating out of Gao Mali in support of Operation Serval In mid June 2019 a French Army Light Aviation Gazelle helicopter crashed in the border region between Mali and Niger after being fired upon by insurgent small arms fire The two pilots and a special forces sniper were subsequently rescued by another helicopter after destroying the damaged helicopter 78 The French military base in Gao was assaulted by suicide bombers on 22 July in an attack that wounded 6 Estonian soldiers and a similar number of French personnel 79 A French soldier was killed on 2 November 2019 when his vehicle was struck by an improvised explosive device during a patrol near Menaka in eastern Mali 80 French commandos launched a heli borne raid later that month on an insurgent camp in Mali s eastern regions which resulted in five insurgents killed and one French soldier being seriously injured 81 On 25 November 2019 13 French soldiers were killed in northern Mali when two French helicopters a Tigre and a Cougar collided in mid air while flying to reinforce soldiers engaged in combat with insurgents 82 The loss of 13 soldiers was the heaviest loss of life for the French military since the 1983 Beirut barracks bombings 83 On 21 December 2019 the French military killed 40 militants in an operation in the Mopti Region of Mali The area where the operation took place was controlled by Macina Liberation Front and it involved France s first ever use of a drone strike which accounted for 7 of the 40 killed insurgents 84 The French Defense Minister Florence Parly announced in February 2020 that France would send an additional 600 troops to the Sahel region bolstering Operation Barkhanes force to 5 100 troops 85 The first contingent of these reinforcements was 200 French Army paratroopers from the 2e REP who were transported to Niger and formed a battle group called Desert Tactical Grouping GTD Altor This battle group operated autonomously and without a base on the ground for over a month receiving supplies only by airdrop GTD Altor killed over a dozen insurgents and disrupted their logistics throughout their initial month long operation 86 Two soldiers from the 1st Foreign Cavalry Regiment 1er REC were seriously wounded when their vehicle struck an IED during operations against insurgents on 23 April 2020 one of the soldier subsequently died from his wounds 87 On 4 May 2020 a second soldier from the 1er REC was killed in action near Gao during a firefight with an insurgent force 88 On 3 June French forces achieved one of their most significant successes of Operation Barkhane with the killing of Abdelmalek Droukdel the leader of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb AQIM French and American intelligence sources had identified Droukdel s presence in a group crossing the Algerian Malian border approximately 80 kilometres east of the town of Tessalit French special forces subsequently conducted an air assault to intercept the group during which they shot and killed Droukdel and a number of other militants 89 A French soldier from the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment 1er RHP was killed during combat operations in Mali on 23 July 2020 when an improvised explosive device was triggered next to his armoured vehicle 90 Two further paratroopers from the 1er RHP were killed on 5 September 2020 by an improvised explosive device which struck their vehicle during an operation in the north of Mali 91 On 31 October 2020 French special Forces launched an operation near the town of Boulikessi near the border of Mali and Burkina Faso 50 jihadists were killed and four were captured On 10 November 2020 Ba Ag Moussa Emir of Jama at Nasr al Islam wal Muslimin along with 4 other militants were killed in an attack carried out by French Special forces 92 93 94 On 12 November 2020 French Mountains commandos operating under Barkhane killed 30 jihadists in Central Mali 95 On 30 November 2020 insurgents launched a coordinated attack on three separate French military bases in Kidal Menaka and Gao in northern Mali using indirect rocket fire but French forces reported no casualties as a result of the attacks 96 A French military convoy consisting of the 1er Regiment de Chasseurs 1er RCh was struck by two IED blasts in quick succession on 28 December 2020 during an operation in the Hombori region in central Mali resulting in the death of three soldiers 97 98 2021 2022 French withdrawal Edit On 2 January 2021 two French soldiers from the 2nd Hussar Regiment 2e RH were killed while taking part in an intelligence gathering mission in northeastern Mali 99 Six French soldiers were wounded on 10 January when a suicide bomber attacked their convoy during a patrol in the central region near Gourma 100 French and Malian forces conducted a joint offensive operation named Operation Eclipse fr from 2 to 20 January in the forests surrounding the town of Boni Over 100 jihadists were killed and 20 captured by French forces during the course of Operation Eclipse 101 French forces carried out a controversial airstrike during the course of Operation Eclipse which locals claimed targeted a wedding ceremony in the village of Bounti in the central Mopti region on 3 January 102 The French military denied these claims and asserted that the strike had successfully targeted a group of jihadist fighters 103 France announced it had suspended joint military operations with Mali on 3 June in response to the coup d etat carried out by the Malian military resulting in the deposition of the interim president Bah Ndaw and Prime Minister Moctar Ouane in May 104 The president of France Emmanuel Macron announced on 10 June that the operation would soon be coming to an end and instead be replaced by a mission involving forces from more countries He also added that the French forces will withdraw in a phased manner but some will remain as part of another international mission for which France would convince other countries to join As to the reason for the withdrawal he stated that France could not continue to work with the national governments in the Sahel region as they were negotiating with terrorists 105 On 2 July France announced that it would resume its suspended joint military operations with Mali following discussions with the interim government of the country 106 On 9 July Macron stated that France will withdraw between 2 500 3 000 troops from the Sahel while retaining other troops to thwart militant operations and supporting regional forces 107 On 13 July he announced that Barkhane would end in the first quarter of 2022 28 On 15 September Macron announced that Barkhane forces had killed Adnan Abu Walid al Sahrawi the leader of Islamic State in the Greater Sahara 108 The assassination was conducted on 17 August using a drone in the Dangalous Forest of Mali near the border with Niger according to the Chief of the Defence Staff Thierry Burkhard after gathering information on locations where al Sahrawi was likely to hide from captured IS GS members Burkhard added that al Sahrawi was travelling on a motorcycle with another person when he was killed A unit comprising 20 soldiers of the French Army s special forces was then sent to confirm the identities of those killed and found that the strike had killed ten IS GS members 109 On 24 September a French soldier was killed in an armed clash with insurgents in Mali close to the border with Burkina Faso 110 As of 2021 Operation Barkhane cost about 1 billion per year 111 On 11 February the French Army anncounced that it killed 40 militants in airstrikes on a motorcycle column in the W National Park area in cooperation with the Burkinabe forces on the previous day The militants had carried out two armed attacks in Benin on 8 and 9 February killing nine people 112 France along with its European allies announced the beginning of the withdrawal of troops from Mali on 17 February blaming the military junta of Mali for obstructions in carrying out their military operations France stated that the withdrawal was meant for its soldiers part of both Operation Barkhane and Takuba Task Force 29 Macron stated that the base of the operation would shift from Mali to Niger 30 France began redeploying its forces to other countries of the Sahel like Chad 113 The French military stated on 7 March 2022 that its forces had killed al Qaeda commander Yahia Djouadi alias Abu Ammar al Jazairi overnight between 25 26 February Djouadi was a former emir of the group in Libya before fleeing to Mali in 2019 He helped organize the group in addition to managing its supplies logistics and finances in the Tombouctou Region 114 On 18 March the military government of Mali asked France to withdraw its troops without delay President Macron however responded that about 5 000 French troops will leave Mali in an orderly fashion over the next four to six months in order to provide protection for the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali MINUSMA and forces of other nations stationed in Mali 31 France announced on 15 June that it had captured Oumeya Ould Albakaye a senior ISGS leader in Mali overnight between 11 12 June 115 On the following day it stated that nearly 40 militants were killed in drone strikes on a column of motorcycles near Niger s border with Burkina Faso on 14 June 116 117 French forces completed their withdrawal from Mali on 15 August 14 The French military stated that 3 000 troops will remain in the Sahel region as part of Operation Barkhane and added that it was not ending but being reformulated 15 However on November 9 Macron announced the end of Operation Barkhane and stated that some French troops will remain in the region under new arrangements 12 Casualties EditFrench forces Edit nbsp French troops of the 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment 35e RAP board a helicopter during a mission Prior to the beginning of Operation Barkhane 10 French troops had been killed in Mali as part of Operation Serval 118 Since the launch of Operation Barkhane in August 2014 the French Ministere des Armees listed 38 servicemen were reported killed in Mali 2 in Burkina Faso and one in Chad 119 The vast distances of Operation Barkhane force s area of operations across the Sahel pose a significant challenge in dealing with French casualties with wounded troops being possibly up to 1 100 km 680 mi from advanced medical aid To overcome these challenges the French military created helicopter mobile medical teams which can rapidly carry out MEDEVAC missions and transport casualties to more advanced medical care Between 2013 and 2016 it was reported that French forces sustained 1 272 casualties which required MEDEVAC of these casualties 18 2 were wounded in action 27 4 suffered trauma injuries and 46 6 were suffering from disease or sickness 120 Insurgent forces Edit After the first year of operations the French Army claimed that approximately 125 insurgents had been neutralized by French forces 121 In late 2015 French army representatives indicated that over 150 ammunition and explosive depositories had been discovered and 25 vehicles and 80 electronic devices GPS computers satellite phones and radio stations had been destroyed This represented 20 tons of ammunition including 2 000 shells 680 grenades guided missiles 25 IEDs and mines 210 detonators 30 mortars machine guns and rocket launchers The army also seized 3 500 kg 7 700 lb of various drugs French forces continued to inflict significant casualties in 2016 with nearly 150 insurgents killed or captured in that year 122 By July 2017 the French Forces estimated that over 400 insurgents had been killed since the start of Operation Barkhane 123 In February 2018 the French Defense Minister Florence Parly indicated that 450 jihadists have been neutralized amongst which 120 have been killed and 150 held as prisoners by Malian authorities In July 2018 General Bruno Guibert head of the Barkhane force confirmed that 120 terrorists had been killed since the beginning of the year In February 2019 Parly announced that over 600 jihadists had been neutralized since the beginning of the operation in 2014 124 Opinions and opposition EditDivided opinions Edit Since 2013 and the beginning of the Operation Serval replaced by Operation Barkhane in 2014 opinions in Mali have been divided as to the legitimacy of the French intervention According to Mission head for Peace in Mali for the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Aurelien Tobie Between 2013 and 2015 we quickly realised after the peace agreements in Ouagadougou and Algiers for Mali that the Malian opinion towards the French presence was changing People were supporting the Serval Operation but did not understand why the French presence was being prolonged with the Barkhane Operation 125 In 2017 the study Mali Meter conducted by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation in Mali polled the level of satisfaction with Operation Barkhane amongst the Malian population 126 Less than half of the respondents were satisfied with the French intervention The study also showed geographical disparities in approbation of Operation Barkhane 126 According to Aurelien Tobie the differences of opinion between the North and the South of the country can be explained by the difference in proximity of the population with the operations People in contact with the forces of Barkhane in the North of the country approve of it much more because they see changes in their daily lives Conversely people interviewed in Southern Mali who are generally higher educated but also further away from the conflict zone are much more critical of the French presence 125 Demonstrations against the French presence have been taking place since 2013 in Mali on a regular basis 127 Patriotic groups have been emerging 128 These groups strive for an end of the French presence and some call for a Russian intervention 128 In June 2019 a former Malian minister anonymously declared to French newspaper Liberation that anti French sentiment is at its peak in Mali Conspiracy theories are flourishing everywhere Soon France will be accused of being responsible for the floods The inertia of our own leaders is the primary cause of the problem 129 Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita also strongly criticised anti French demonstrations He stated in December 2019 that the foreign forces in our country are our allies in this tragic war imposed on us We will not win this war by misunderstanding who our true enemy is and by falling into the trap of the terrorist groups 130 French President Emmanuel Macron has denounced a disinformation campaign led by a rival power implying it was Russia although he did not explicitly name it 131 On August 7 2023 94 French senators sent an open letter to President Emmanuel Macron in which they regretted the failure of Operation Barkhane and the erasure of France in Africa The signatories led by LR Roger Karoutchi Bruno Retailleau and Christian Cambon ask the president to review his strategy 132 Francafrique Edit Much of the criticism of the French intervention revolves around the concept of Francafrique a pejorative term used to describe the alleged neocolonial practices of France in its former African colonies 133 See also EditList of battles involving France in modern historyNotes EditReferences Edit a b c d e f Francois Hollande s African adventures The French are reorganising security in an increasingly troubled region Economist 21 July 2014 a b Gallery Estonian platoon enters service in Mali Eesti Rahvusringhaaling 10 August 2018 Retrieved 8 October 2018 a b The Danish effort in the Sahel region MINUSMA and Operation Barkhane fmn dk Archived from the original on 26 September 2020 Retrieved 17 December 2019 Forces Swedish Armed Swedish Special Forces to Mali Forsvarsmakten Retrieved 18 November 2020 Maclean Ruth O Reilly Finbarr 29 March 2020 Crisis in the Sahel Becoming France s Forever War The New York Times a b UK France Summit 3rd March 2016 Annex on security and defence PDF Ministry of Defence 3 March 2016 Retrieved 24 March 2016 a b Defence Secretary secures progress on Brimstone sales as unmanned aircraft project moves forward Ministry of Defence 3 March 2016 Retrieved 24 March 2016 And he committed the UK to providing one strategic airlift flight a month to support French forces in their operations against terrorists in Africa Operation FREQUENCE Forces gc ca National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces 20 February 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2017 The CAF conduct airlift operations in support of French operations in West Africa and the Sahel region Government of Canada National Defence Canadian Armed Forces 11 November 2016 Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Operation FREQUENCE army mil US Army Retrieved 7 November 2019 France ends West African Barkhane military operation Reuters 10 June 2021 Retrieved 10 July 2021 a b c Hugh Schofield 9 November 2022 France calls time on anti jihadist Operation Barkhane in Sahel BBC News Retrieved 12 November 2022 David Coffey 12 November 2022 Did France s Operation Barkhane win the fight against terror in the Sahel Radio France Internationale Retrieved 13 January 2023 a b c Annie Risemberg 15 August 2022 French Forces Complete Departure from Mali Voice of America Retrieved 24 August 2022 a b c d e Barkhane 3 000 French troops deployed in the Sahel after Mali Africanews Agence France Presse 18 August 2022 Retrieved 22 August 2022 France s African forever war UnHerd 31 July 2020 Retrieved 6 August 2020 Patrick Angevin 17 February 2022 Retrait francais du Mali Pourquoi le bilan de l operation Barkhane reste tres discutable French withdrawal from Mali Why the results of Operation Barkhane remain very questionable Ouest France in French Retrieved 19 November 2022 Malis rundasid terroristid Gao sojavaebaasi In Mali terrorists attacked the Gao military base Estonian Defence Forces Archived from the original on 7 November 2019 Retrieved 24 July 2019 Six Estonian Defence Forces members injured in Mali terrorist attack Estonian Public Broadcasting 23 July 2019 Starr Barbara Cohen Zachary 19 October 2017 What we know and don t know about the deadly Niger attack Washington CNN Retrieved 19 October 2017 Anthony Fouchard Au Sahel l armee francaise a tue au moins 2 800 presumes djihadistes Mediapart 16 fevrier 2022 a b c d France sets up anti Islamist force in Africa s Sahel bbc co uk a b c d e Larive Maxime H A 7 August 2014 Welcome to France s New War on Terror in Africa Operation Barkhane nationalinterest org a b c Hollande announces new military operation in West Africa Archived 8 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine france24 com French troops in Mali anti jihadist campaign mired in mud and mistrust Reuters 13 August 2019 Retrieved 13 November 2019 Mali President PM Resign After Arrest Confirming 2nd Coup in 9 Months VOA News 26 May 2021 Archived from the original on 29 May 2021 Retrieved 29 May 2021 Macron announces the end of France s anti Islamist Operation Barkhane in the Sahel France24 Agence France Presse Reuters France 24 10 June 2021 Retrieved 10 June 2021 a b Macron announces France s Sahel military force will end in early 2022 Agence France Presse France 24 14 July 2021 Retrieved 5 August 2021 a b France European allies announce military withdrawal from Mali Al Jazeera 17 February 2022 Retrieved 16 March 2022 a b Macron announces French troop withdrawal from Mali Agence France Presse France 24 Reuters France 24 17 February 2022 Retrieved 24 August 2022 a b Mali s ruling junta asks France to withdraw troops without delay France 24 18 March 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2022 BBC News France Rafale jets target Gao in eastern Mali BBC 13 January 2013 Retrieved 15 January 2013 Operation Barkhane French Ministry of Defense France Launches New Sahel Counter Terrorism Operation Barkhane ibtimes co uk Terve Claire 26 November 2019 Qu est ce que l operation Barkhane dans laquelle la France est engagee au Sahel What is Operation Barkhane in which France is engaged in the Sahel Le Huffington Post in French Retrieved 9 April 2020 AirForces Monthly Stamford Lincolnshire England Key Publishing Ltd November 2015 p 23 Aktuelle Einsatze der Bundeswehr Current deployments of the Bundeswehr in German Einsatz bundeswehr de 17 February 2018 Retrieved 21 February 2018 French defense ministry to send 600 more troops to Africa s Sahel Reuters 2 February 2020 Retrieved 2 February 2020 AirForces Monthly Stamford Lincolnshire England Key Publishing Ltd November 2020 p 22 Three Royal Air Force Chinooks arrive in Mali UK Defence Journal 19 July 2018 Retrieved 3 August 2018 RAF Chinooks Begin Mali Deployment With French Military Forces net 28 September 2018 Retrieved 13 June 2019 War in Mali The British Are Coming Historyguy com 29 July 2020 Retrieved 29 July 2020 de Cherisey Erwan 28 March 2018 Estonia pledges troops for France s Sahel mission Jane s Information Group Estonian infantry unit to deploy to Mali in August ERR 27 July 2018 Hankewitz Sten 11 August 2018 An Estonian infantry unit arrives in Mali to fight terrorists Estonian World com Retrieved 8 October 2018 Estonia parliament approves Mali troop increase for Operation Barkhane thedefensepost com 8 November 2019 Forsvarsmakten Svenska specialforband pa plats i Mali Swedish special forces on location in Mali Forsvarsmakten in Swedish Retrieved 6 February 2021 Forces Swedish Armed Mali Task Force Takuba Forsvarsmakten Retrieved 6 February 2021 Napolitano Ardee Irish John 14 January 2022 Sweden to withdraw from French led special forces mission in Mali Reuters Retrieved 15 January 2022 French Military Says 24 Jihadists Killed in Mali ABC News Retrieved 9 November 2014 Un soldat francais tue dans un accident d helicoptere au Burkina Faso French soldier killed in helicopter crash in Burkina Faso Le Monde 30 November 2014 Retrieved 5 August 2018 French Forces Kill a Leader of Jihadists in Mali Raid New York Times 11 December 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Niger des arrestations lors d une operation militaire franco nigerienne Niger arrests during a Franco Nigerian military operation Radio France Internationale 16 April 2015 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Deces d un soldat des forces speciales blesse en octobre au Mali Death of a wounded special forces soldier wounded in October in Mali AFP 26 November 2015 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Attaque de Ouagadougou des forces de securite sous equipees et mal coordonnees SudOuest fr 18 janvier 2016 Laurent Lagneau Mali Les forces francaises ont neutralise un chef d al Qaida au Maghreb islamique Opex360 2 mars 2016 Three French soldiers killed in Mali mine blast The Guardian Agence France Presse 13 April 2016 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 April 2016 Mali un soldat francais tue le groupe Ansar Dine revendique Mali a French soldier killed the Ansar Dine group claims AFP 5 November 2016 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Baba Ahmed French forces arrest 8 jihadists in northern Mali Official Star Tribune Archived from the original on 17 March 2017 a b Angers Un hommage emouvant au soldat Julien Barbe tue au Mali Angers A moving tribute to soldier Julien Barbe killed in Mali Le Courrier de l ouest 13 April 2017 Retrieved 7 May 2017 French soldier killed in clash with terrorists in Mali France 24 6 April 2017 Mali attaque a Tombouctou contre les casques bleus et la force Barkhane RFI 1 June 2017 L Elysee annonce la mort accidentelle d un soldat francais au Mali Le Monde avec AFP 18 June 2017 Lamothe Dan 23 October 2017 Caught in a deadly ambush US troops in Niger waited an hour for French air power to arrive The Washington Post Retrieved 24 October 2017 Pentagon acknowledges a second team was on the ground in Niger CBS News 26 October 2017 ER APV Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 14 October 2017 Allen Ian 16 October 2017 French Special Forces were on plane that crashed in Ivory Coast killing 4 intelNews Retrieved 17 October 2017 Of the ten people that were on board four are reportedly dead six others are seriously hurt Reports said that the four dead passengers were all Moldovan nationals Two other Moldovans and four French nationals were injured Mali 3 soldats francais blesses dans un attentat Le Point avec AFP 12 janvier 2018 French forces kill at least 10 jihadists in Mali military sources News24 com Agence France Presse Retrieved 10 August 2020 Two French soldiers were killed after their armoured vehicle was hit by an explosive device in Mali the French president s office said on Wednesday France 24 3 March 2018 Retrieved 2 August 2018 Mali 15 militants killed in Timbuktu attack News com au 15 April 2018 Retrieved 17 April 2018 French army patrol attacked in Mali Australian Associated Press 1 July 2018 Retrieved 2 August 2018 Mali car bombing kills 4 civilians wounds 31 others including soldiers Australian Associated Press 1 July 2018 Retrieved 2 August 2018 French forces kill senior jihadist leader in Mali Xinhua English news cn xinhuanet com Archived from the original on 23 February 2019 Retrieved 14 April 2019 French forces kill JNIM deputy leader El Hamame in Mali Parly says The Defense Post 22 February 2019 Retrieved 14 April 2019 French military doctor killed in Mali Associated Press 2 April 2019 Retrieved 4 April 2019 French troops free hostages in Burkina Faso BBC 10 May 2019 Retrieved 10 May 2019 French Gazelle down in North Africa crew rescued Jane s Defence Weekly Retrieved 22 July 2019 Six Estonian Defence Forces members injured in Mali terrorist attack ERR News 23 July 2019 Retrieved 23 July 2019 French soldier killed in Mali by roadside bomb in attack claimed by IS group France 24 2 November 2019 Retrieved 5 November 2018 French commando seriously injured in Mali counter ISIS operation that killed 5 terrorists near Indelimane The Defence Post 18 November 2019 Retrieved 20 November 2018 Thirteen French helicopter troops killed in Mali combat operation Reuters 26 November 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Thirteen French soldiers killed in Mali helicopter accident France24 26 November 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 French army carries out first ever drone strike during Mali op France 24 23 December 2019 Retrieved 23 December 2019 France to send 600 more troops to Africa s Sahel France 24 21 February 2020 Retrieved 21 February 2019 Niger Deployes durant un mois dans le Liptako les legionnaires du 2e REP ont mene la vie dure aux jihadistes Niger Deployed for a month in Liptako the legionnaires of the 2nd REP made life difficult for the jihadists opex360 com in French 6 March 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2020 French Foreign Legion soldier dies from injuries after anti jihadist operation in Mali France 24 2 May 2020 Retrieved 10 August 2020 French Foreign Legion soldier dies in combat in Mali France 24 4 May 2020 Retrieved 10 August 2020 How AQIM leader Abdelmalek Droukdel was killed in Mali The Africa Report 8 June 2020 Retrieved 5 August 2019 French soldier killed in combat in Mali France 24 23 July 2020 Retrieved 26 July 2019 Mali deux soldats francais tues un autre grievement blesse AFP 5 septembre 2020 Ba Ag Moussa French forces kill jihadist commander in Mali today rtl lu Retrieved 10 July 2021 French Forces Kill Jihadist Commander Ba Ag Moussa in Mali The Defense Post 13 November 2020 Retrieved 10 July 2021 Leader Mamouth 11 November 2020 Le mamouth Une nouvelle action de Sabre une HVT ciblee actualise The Mammoth A New Saber Action Targeted HVT Updated Retrieved 10 July 2021 AFP Agence France Presse French Army Says 30 Jihadists Killed In Mali www barrons com Retrieved 10 July 2021 Islamists attack three French military bases in Mali Reuters 30 November 2020 Retrieved 29 December 2019 Three French soldiers killed in Mali IED blast aljazeera 28 December 2020 Retrieved 29 December 2019 Three French soldiers killed by explosive device in Mali operation France 24 28 December 2020 Two French soldiers killed during operation in Mali France 24 2 January 2021 Six French soldiers injured in Mali Anadolu Agency 10 January 2021 Une centaine de djihadistes tues lors d une operation militaire franco malienne Le Monde 27 janvier 2021 Wedding guests killed in Mali airstrike local sources say The Guardian 3 January 2021 Sahel conflict France rejects reports of airstrike on Mali wedding BBC 5 January 2021 France halts joint army operations with Malian forces over coup Al Jazeera 3 June 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Munshi Neil How France lost Mali failure to quell jihadi threat opens door to Russia Financial Times Retrieved 24 December 2021 France resumes joint military operations in Mali Agence France Presse Al Jazeera 3 July 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Charlton Angela Petesch Carley Macpherson Masha 9 July 2021 France to pull more than 2 000 troops from Africa s Sahel Associated Press Retrieved 9 August 2021 French Forces Kill an ISIS Leader in Sahara Macron Says The New York Times 16 September 2021 Retrieved 16 September 2021 Charlton Angela Ahmed Baba Larson Krista Petesch Carley Mednick Sam 16 September 2021 France calls killing of Islamic State leader big victory Associated Press Retrieved 17 September 2021 French soldier killed in Mali in clash with armed terrorist group France 24 Reuters 24 September 2021 John Irishand Tiemoko Diallo 17 February 2022 French military to quit Mali in possible boost to jihadists Reuters Retrieved 25 March 2022 French forces neutralize 40 militants in Burkina Faso Agence France Presse Deutsche Presse Agentur Deustche Welle 12 February 2022 Retrieved 6 August 2022 Barkhane commander visits Chad military base to deploy new equipment Agence France Presse Africanews Africanews 25 February 2022 Retrieved 16 March 2022 French army says senior al Qaeda leader killed in Mali Agence France Presse France 24 7 March 2022 Tangi Salaun Sudip Kar Gupta 15 June 2022 France announces capture of senior Islamic State figure in Mali Reuters Retrieved 5 August 2022 Nearly 40 extremists killed in drone strikes in Niger French military Associated Press 16 June 2022 Retrieved 6 August 2022 Dominique Vidalon 16 June 2022 French army says killed close to 40 militants in strike in Niger Reuters Retrieved 6 August 2022 One more French soldier killed in Mali Xinhua News Agency 15 July 2014 Archived from the original on 19 July 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2014 In Memoriam Ministere de la Defense 2 January 2021 Retrieved 9 February 2021 Forward medevac during Serval and Barkhane operations in Sahel a registry study 2017 sfn error no target CITEREF Forward medevac during Serval and Barkhane operations in Sahel a registry study 2017 help Barkhane un an d operations Barkhane one year of operations PDF Ministere de la Defense in French 10 July 2015 Archived from the original on 20 February 2016 Francois Xavier Freland Gal Bernard Barrera Barkhane est entree dans une phase de stabilisation Jeune Afrique 17 March 2016 in French Laurent Lagneau Sahel Le general Bruno Guibert a pris le commandement de la force Barkhane Opex360 com 31 July 2017 in French Sahel plus de 600 djihadistes neutralises par l armee francaise depuis 2015 Sahel more than 600 jihadists neutralized by the French army since 2015 L Express avec AFP in French 28 February 2019 a b Belsoeur Camille 17 August 2017 Au Sahel la colere sourde des populations contre les troupes francaises In the Sahel the muted anger of the populations against the French troops Slate fr in French Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Mali Metre 6 June 2017 Etude Les maliens meconnaissent la mission de l UE et se divisent sur barkhane Study Malians ignore the mission of the EU and are divided on barkhane MaliWeb Retrieved 14 May 2020 Mace1 Celian 19 December 2019 Au Mali le refus du neocolonialisme In Mali the refusal of neocolonialism Liberation fr in French a b Au Mali le sentiment antifrancais gagne du terrain In Mali anti French sentiment is gaining ground Le Monde fr in French 10 January 2020 Malagardis Maria 13 June 2019 Au Mali le sentiment antifrancais est a son paroxysme In Mali anti French sentiment is at its peak Liberation fr in French Retrieved 14 May 2020 magazine Le Point 10 January 2020 Mali un millier de manifestants a Bamako pour reclamer le depart des troupes etrangeres Mali a thousand demonstrators in Bamako to demand the departure of foreign troops Le Point in French Retrieved 14 May 2020 Pigeaud Fanny 1 March 2020 Presence francaise en Afrique le ras le bol French presence in Africa fed up Le Monde diplomatique in French Retrieved 14 May 2020 rfi C3 A9nateurs fran C3 A7ais regret the C3 A9failure of barkhane in an open letter C3 A0 emmanuel macron in an open letter to Emmanuel Macron RFI August 8 2023 Bovcon Maja 23 August 2011 Francafrique and regime theory European Journal of International Relations 19 1 5 26 doi 10 1177 1354066111413309 S2CID 145093241 Further reading EditErforth Benedikt 2020 Multilateralism as a tool Exploring French military cooperation in the Sahel Journal of Strategic Studies Carfantan C Goudard Y Butin C Duron Martinaud S Even J P Anselme A Dulaurent E Gehant M Vitalis V Bay C Bancarel J 4 November 2016 Forward medevac during Serval and Barkhane operations in Sahel a registry study Injury 48 1 58 63 doi 10 1016 j injury 2016 10 043 PMID 27829492 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operation Barkhane amp oldid 1178625398, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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