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Nexio Global Media > Africa > Russia’s Sahel Strategy Escalates Instability in West Africa’s Resource-Rich Nations
Africa

Russia’s Sahel Strategy Escalates Instability in West Africa’s Resource-Rich Nations

Nexio Studio Newsroom
Last updated: March 14, 2026 9:28 am
By Nexio Studio Newsroom 5 Min Read
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Sahel in Crisis: Russian Intervention Fails to Stem Rising Violence

The Sahel region, a vast expanse bridging Sub-Saharan Africa and North Africa, is increasingly becoming a battleground for competing global powers and extremist groups. Despite its wealth of resources—gold, uranium, lithium, and oil—the area remains mired in instability, with military regimes turning to Russia for security assistance. However, this pivot has done little to curb the violence, raising questions about the future of the region and its people.

Contents
Sahel in Crisis: Russian Intervention Fails to Stem Rising ViolenceA Region on the BrinkThe Pivot to RussiaRussia’s Security-for-Resources ModelA Failed PromiseA Path Forward

A Region on the Brink

The Sahel has long been a strategic crossroads, connecting Africa’s north and south. Its abundant natural resources have made it a magnet for foreign powers, including the U.S., China, and Russia. Yet, these riches have also drawn the attention of extremist groups like Boko Haram, the Islamic State West African Province (ISWAP), and Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM).

Countries such as Niger, Mali, Chad, and Burkina Faso have borne the brunt of this chaos. Persistent attacks by jihadist insurgents and bandits have pushed national security systems to their limits. In Burkina Faso alone, the government has lost control of nearly 40% of its territory.

The Pivot to Russia

The region’s instability deepened in the early 2020s with a wave of coups in Mali (2020/2021), Burkina Faso (2022), and Niger (2023). These military juntas withdrew from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) in 2025, forming the Alliance of Sahelian States (AES). They also severed ties with Western powers, expelling French and U.S. troops.

The juntas accused Western allies, particularly France, of prolonging counter-terrorism operations to maintain access to strategic minerals. Frustrated by the human rights conditions attached to U.S. military aid, they turned to Russia for support.

Russia’s Security-for-Resources Model

Russia’s involvement in the Sahel follows a familiar pattern. Since 2017, Moscow has used private military contractors like the Wagner Group to secure mining rights in exchange for regime protection. Following the death of Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin in 2023, the Kremlin rebranded the group as the Africa Corps, bringing it under direct military control.

In the Sahel, Russia’s approach remains transactional. The Africa Corps offers security for ruling elites in exchange for exclusive access to resources, prioritizing regime survival over civilian welfare. However, this strategy has failed to stabilize the region.

A Failed Promise

Since Russian paramilitaries arrived, the security situation has worsened, not improved. Heavy-handed tactics have fueled resentment, serving as a recruitment tool for extremists. In Mali, JNIM has effectively besieged the capital, Bamako, while in Niger, the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS) operates with near impunity in the Tillabéri region.

Unlike Western interventions, which have historically invested in governance, economic development, and civil society, Russia’s model is purely extractive. Its interventions in Sudan, Libya, and Syria have left behind hollowed-out institutions and escalated violence. The Sahel appears to be heading down the same path.

A Path Forward

To reclaim stability, the Sahel requires a multifaceted approach that goes beyond military force. Addressing root causes such as poverty, lack of education, and weak governance is essential. While Western interventions have been criticized for paternalism, they remain more aligned with long-term development goals than Russia’s mercenary-driven model.

A sustainable solution must combine kinetic force with non-kinetic engagement, promoting democratic consolidation and human rights. Without these, the Sahel risks trading its sovereignty for a Russian landlord uninterested in the welfare of its people.

The region must return to a multilateral framework that prioritizes the African people over the survival of military regimes. Only then can it begin to heal and rebuild.

— Reported by Nexio News

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