CONFLICTS/SAHEL INSURGENCY
ACTIVEAfrica

SAHEL INSURGENCY

STARTED JANUARY 17, 2012
DURATION: 14 YEARS, 3 MONTHS
4 PARTIES
SIDE A
🇲🇱
Mali
Mali Armed Forces (FAMa) + Africa Corps
🇧🇫
Burkina Faso
Burkina Faso (ADF + VDP)
SIDE B
JNIM (al-Qaeda in Sahel)
B
ISGS (Islamic State Sahel)
B
ESTIMATED CASUALTIES
25,000+ dead since 2012; 3 million+ displaced; 14 million food insecure
TERRITORIAL CONTROL
JNIM controls/contests 60% of Burkina Faso, northern/central Mali; ISGS holds tri-border Liptako-Gourma zone
LIVE UPDATES
Mar 17, 2026JNIM militants attack military outpost in northern Burkina Faso; Mali and Niger forces conduct joint counter-terrorism operations
Mar 13, 2026Wagner Group / Africa Corps continues operations supporting juntas in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger
CLASSIFIED
INTELLIGENCE BRIEFINGSAHEL INSURGENCY
WARDATALAB.AI // 2026-04-15
INTEL // AFRICA // ACTIVE
REF: SAHEL-INSURGENCY
SITUATION OVERVIEW

The Sahel insurgency has evolved from a regional Tuareg rebellion into one of the world's most complex jihadist conflicts, spanning an arc from Mauritania to Chad and threatening to destabilize sub-Saharan Africa. What began with the 2012 Malian coup and Tuareg-Islamist seizure of northern Mali has metastasized into parallel insurgencies across Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger — three countries that have all experienced military coups since 2020 and expelled French and Western forces. The jihadist groups JNIM (Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin, al-Qaeda affiliate) and ISGS (Islamic State Sahel Province) now control or contest an area roughly the size of France.

The strategic catastrophe of the Sahel unfolded in three phases. Phase 1 (2012-2015): Tuareg-Islamist rebellion in northern Mali following Libya's collapse; French Operation Serval expelled jihadists from major northern towns. Phase 2 (2015-2020): Insurgency metastasizes south and east; Operation Barkhane with 5,100 French troops attempts containment; jihadists adapt with motorcycle-based hit-and-run attacks. Phase 3 (2020-present): Military coups in Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, and Niger bring anti-French juntas to power; French forces expelled; Russian Africa Corps (formerly Wagner Group) fills vacuum.

The departure of French and Western forces represents a massive intelligence, air support, and special operations capability loss. The Malian Armed Forces partnered with Africa Corps mercenaries have committed documented massacres of civilians including the 2022 Moura massacre (500+ killed), while failing to stop jihadist territorial expansion. JNIM now blockades provincial capitals in Burkina Faso and Timbuktu in Mali, controlling supply routes and imposing taxation.

KEY EVENTS & TIMELINE
ACTIVE PHASEstarted January 1, 2020
2020Coup in Mali; JNIM and ISGS expand; thousands killed in insurgent attacks
2021Second coup in Mali; France begins Barkhane withdrawal; Wagner Group arrives
2022Burkina Faso coups (Jan + Sep); French forces expelled from Mali
2023Niger coup (Jul); France expelled; Alliance of Sahel States (AES) formed
2023-2024Wagner/Africa Corps expand across Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger
2024Burkina Faso faces worst violence — Barsalogho massacre; JNIM attacks surge
2025AES states exit ECOWAS; Russian mercenary presence deepens; 10,000+ conflict deaths annually
Mar 2026JNIM attacks in northern Burkina Faso; joint Sahel operations continue
STRATEGIC SIGNIFICANCE

The Sahel hosts the world's fastest growing jihadist insurgency by territorial control. JNIM's expansion threatens coastal West African states — Benin, Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coast — potentially destabilizing the Gulf of Guinea. The region produces 25% of global uranium (Niger is world's 7th largest producer) and significant gold deposits, creating resource competition between Russia (Africa Corps mineral access), China (infrastructure investments), and Western interests. Climate change is a primary driver: the Sahel is warming 1.5x faster than the global average, intensifying farmer-herder conflicts over water and arable land that jihadists exploit for recruitment. Over 3 million people are displaced and 14 million face acute food insecurity across Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger.

FORCES & CAPABILITIES

JNIM commands an estimated 30,000-40,000 fighters organized into regional zones, armed with motorcycles, pickup trucks, AK-pattern rifles, RPGs, IEDs, and increasingly captured military weapons. JNIM's sophisticated information operations in Fulfulde and local languages successfully recruit from marginalized herding communities. ISGS operates separately with approximately 5,000-10,000 fighters in the tri-border Liptako-Gourma zone. Africa Corps deploys 1,500-2,000 mercenaries in Mali using Mi-8/Mi-24 helicopters, Su-25 attack aircraft, and armor, but has not reversed jihadist gains. Burkina Faso's Volunteers for the Defense of the Homeland — civilian self-defense militias numbering 50,000 — have become the principal defense force by default.

CURRENT STATUS

ACTIVE. Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger juntas formed the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) after expelling French forces. Wagner Group/Africa Corps mercenaries support the juntas. JNIM (al-Qaeda affiliate) and ISGS (ISIS affiliate) continue attacks on military and civilian targets. Burkina Faso faces the worst violence. The Sahel has become the world's fastest-growing terrorism hotspot with 10,000+ conflict deaths annually.

WARDATALAB INTELLIGENCE PLATFORM — ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDLAST UPDATED: 2026-04-15
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