Tag: Mali

  • Azawad in 2026: The Separatist State That Just Killed a Defense Minister

    On April 25, 2026, before dawn, coordinated attacks struck military positions across Mali — in Kidal, Gao, Sévaré, Mopti, and the garrison town of Kati, 15 kilometers from the capital Bamako, where a car bomb detonated at the residence of Defense Minister Sadio Camara, killing him and members of his family. The intelligence chief, Modibo Koné, was reportedly seriously injured. Within hours, fighters on motorcycles were riding through northern cities with minimal resistance. By April 26, the Azawad Liberation Front — the FLA, the Tuareg-led separatist coalition — had retaken Kidal, the symbolic capital of the independence movement they have been fighting for since before Mali existed as a country. Russia’s Africa Corps — the successor to the Wagner Group that had captured Kidal in November 2023 — negotiated an escorted withdrawal from the city through Algerian mediation and pulled south. By May 1, the FLA flag was flying over Tessalit, near the Algerian border. JNIM — Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin, al-Qaeda’s Sahel affiliate — announced a blockade of Bamako, set up checkpoints on the roads into the capital, and called on Malians to rise up against the junta. The most coordinated offensive in Mali since 2012 was being conducted by two groups that share a common enemy and almost nothing else: a secular Tuareg separatist movement fighting for an independent state called Azawad, and an al-Qaeda franchise fighting for an Islamic emirate across the entire Sahel. The alliance is pragmatic, temporary, and — if the 2012 precedent holds — likely to end violently.

    What Azawad is

    Azawad is the Tuareg name for northern Mali — roughly 60% of Mali’s territory, covering 822,000 square kilometers of Sahara and Sahel, with a population of approximately 1.5 million in an area larger than Texas. The Tuareg are a historically nomadic Berber people spread across Mali, Niger, Algeria, Libya, and Burkina Faso, who have fought for independence or autonomy in four major rebellions — 1963, 1990, 2006, and 2012 — each one suppressed, each one followed by peace agreements the Malian government signed and then ignored. The pattern is consistent enough that the Tuareg have a proverb for it, though the international community keeps treating each cycle as a surprise.

    On April 6, 2012, after Tuareg fighters who had served in Muammar Gaddafi’s security forces returned from Libya’s civil war with weapons and combat experience, the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad — the MNLA — declared independence. The declaration lasted approximately three months before al-Qaeda-linked groups turned on their Tuareg allies, seized control of the north, and imposed an interpretation of Islamic law that the secular MNLA had explicitly rejected. France intervened with Operation Serval in January 2013, drove the jihadists from the cities, and the Malian state resumed nominal control. The 2015 Algiers Accords promised autonomy, integration of former fighters, and economic investment in the north. The junta that seized power in a 2020 coup renounced the Algiers Accords in January 2024, declaring them “dead.” The Tuareg took that at face value. The FLA was formed from the remnants of the MNLA and the broader Coordination of Azawad Movements in 2024, under the leadership of Alghabass Ag Intalla, with a mandate of self-determination that the peace process was supposed to have addressed.

    The Wagner catastrophe

    The sequence that led to April 25 is a case study in how covert institutional power operates — and how it fails. Mali’s junta expelled French forces in 2022 and UN peacekeepers (MINUSMA) in 2023, replacing them with Russia’s Wagner Group under a straightforward transaction: mining concessions and political cover in exchange for security guarantees. Wagner took the concessions. In November 2023, Wagner and Malian forces captured Kidal — the Tuareg stronghold that no Malian government had controlled since 2012. It was presented as validation of the junta’s Russia pivot.

    In July 2024, at the Battle of Tinzaouaten near the Algerian border, a combined force of FLA separatists and JNIM jihadists ambushed a convoy of Malian soldiers and Wagner fighters. The FLA claimed 84 Wagner dead and 47 Malian soldiers killed. Wagner’s founder Prigozhin was already dead — killed in August 2023 in a plane crash widely attributed to the Kremlin — and the organization was being reorganized as the Africa Corps under Russian military intelligence control. The Tinzaouaten defeat exposed the operational limits of a mercenary force fighting in terrain it didn’t know, against fighters who had spent decades in it.

    After Tinzaouaten, Africa Corps reoriented toward mineral extraction and self-protection, reducing its engagement tempo from 537 battles in 2024 to 402 in 2025 and averaging just 24 incidents per month by early 2026, according to ACLED data. The security vacuum widened. JNIM expanded into central Mali. The FLA consolidated the north. The Battlefields of the Future course covers how modern warfare increasingly favors mobile, locally rooted forces against conventional militaries operating in unfamiliar environments. Mali is the proof case: a national army backed by Russian mercenaries, with air assets and armored vehicles, is losing to motorcycle-mounted fighters with local knowledge, cross-border supply lines, and the ability to melt into a civilian population they are ethnically and linguistically part of.

    The JNIM-FLA alliance

    The most dangerous development in the April 25 attacks is not the military outcome — it is the coordination. JNIM and the FLA issued separate statements confirming their mutual cooperation for the first time since the war began. Wassim Nasr, France 24’s expert on jihadist networks, called the coordination “significant” and noted that it reflected months of planning. The Egmont Institute’s Nina Wilen said it goes “much further than what we’ve seen in the past.”

    The alliance echoes 2012 — when the MNLA allied with Ansar Dine and AQIM to seize the north, only for the jihadists to turn on the Tuareg once the Malian military had been expelled. Iyad Ag Ghali, who now leads JNIM, was himself a leading figure in Tuareg rebellions before founding Ansar Dine — a personal trajectory that illustrates how fluid the boundary between separatism and jihadism has been in northern Mali for decades.

    The structural tension remains identical to 2012. The FLA wants an independent secular state — Azawad — in northern Mali. JNIM wants an Islamic emirate across the entire Sahel. These goals are incompatible. But both groups need the Malian military and its Russian backers removed from the north before they can pursue their respective visions. The enemy of my enemy is useful until the common enemy is gone. Then the alliance fractures, as it did in 2012, violently.

    What’s different in 2026 is that France is not coming back. MINUSMA is gone. The United States, focused on the Iran situation, has not signaled any appetite for Sahelian intervention. And the Alliance of Sahel States — the junta-led bloc of Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger — conducted joint airstrikes after the April 25 attacks but cannot project sustained ground force into northern Mali’s terrain. The Middle East Forum’s analysis was blunt: the collapse of the Malian state is creating a de facto partition — JNIM controls central Mali and the routes into the south, and the FLA controls Kidal and the north — that validates JNIM’s model of defeating both Western-backed governments and Russian mercenary forces simultaneously. That last point matters beyond Mali. Every junta in the Sahel is tracking the trajectory.

    What Russia lost

    The Africa Corps withdrawal from Kidal — surrendering the same city Wagner had captured 29 months earlier — is the single most damaging operational failure for Russian security partnerships in Africa since Wagner’s entry into the continent. The GRU Unit 29155 post documented Russia’s intelligence operations in Europe. The Wagner/Africa Corps model was supposed to demonstrate that Russian security partnerships could deliver results that Western partnerships could not: no congressional oversight, no human rights conditions, no withdrawal timelines. The Mali result demonstrates the opposite. Wagner took Kidal in 2023 with a major offensive. Africa Corps lost it in 2026 without a fight. The concessions remained. The security guarantees didn’t.

    The Just Security analysis identified the pattern’s broader implications: Russia’s inability to prevent the collapse of the Assad regime in Syria and the humiliation at Kidal each signal the limits of what Moscow can deliver for its partners. Sahelian regimes that courted Russian security cooperation “can now draw their own conclusions about what that offer is actually worth when its partners come under sustained pressure.” The ARMSCOR post documented a state that built its own arms industry rather than depending on external partners. Mali did the opposite — outsourced security to a foreign mercenary force — and the mercenary force, when the pressure came, negotiated its own withdrawal and left.

    The resource dimension

    Northern Mali is not strategically useless. The territory contains gold deposits that generate significant revenue for whoever controls the mines. The Africa Corps’ reorientation toward mineral extraction — prioritizing mining concessions over security operations — is documented by multiple sources. The rare earth and conflict minerals literature documents the same dynamic across multiple African conflicts: natural resources fund the armed groups that control the territory, and the groups that control the territory direct the resource revenue toward military capability. The Ilemi Triangle post documented how oil under disputed territory transforms a border inconvenience into a crisis. In Mali, gold under contested territory funds the war that determines who controls the gold. The loop is closed.

    Northern Mali also sits on trans-Saharan trafficking routes — narcotics, weapons, and migrants moving north toward Algeria, Libya, and Europe. Control of these routes generates revenue for every armed group operating in the region. The Shadowcraft course documents how covert institutional power operates through commercial and financial intermediaries. In northern Mali, the intermediary is the smuggling economy, and every faction — the junta, the FLA, JNIM, the Africa Corps, and the local militias — participates in it while fighting over who controls the chokepoints.

    Why it’s in the course

    Azawad is the Off The Map case study in active disintegration — a territory that declared independence in 2012, lost it within months, spent a decade under peace accords that were never implemented, and is now — as of the last week of April 2026 — closer to de facto independence than at any point since the original declaration, because the Malian state can no longer project force into the territory, the Russian mercenaries who were supposed to hold it have withdrawn, and the international community that intervened in 2013 has no appetite to do so again.

    Transnistria is a frozen conflict defrosting as the patron withdraws its subsidy. Somaliland is a functional state awaiting recognition. North Sentinel Island is a pre-state territory that rejects contact. Mount Athos is a medieval institution preserved by theology and law. The Ilemi Triangle is a colonial border that was never coherent. Azawad is something else: a territory whose independence is being won — right now, this week — by an alliance of secular separatists and al-Qaeda jihadists who agree on nothing except that the current government must fall, in a war where the government’s foreign mercenary backers have already left, and where the question is not whether northern Mali will be controlled by Bamako, because it won’t, but whether the FLA and JNIM can coexist long enough to build something, or whether the alliance shatters and the cycle that began in 2012 repeats itself with nobody left to intervene.

    This is the kind of place our Off The Map course was built to map — where the FLA flag is flying over Kidal for the first time since 2023, the Wagner Group’s successor has been escorted out of the city it captured 29 months ago, JNIM is blockading the capital, the defense minister is dead, France isn’t coming back, the UN isn’t coming back, and the separatist state that was declared in 2012, suppressed in 2013, promised autonomy in 2015, betrayed in 2024, and resurrected by force on April 25, 2026, is closer to reality than at any point in the Tuareg people’s century-long fight for it — in alliance with an al-Qaeda affiliate that will, if history is any guide, be the next enemy they have to fight.

  • Wagner Group Explained: Russia’s Private Army and the Business Model Behind It

    Private military companies are technically illegal in Russia. This did not prevent a catering magnate from St. Petersburg from building one that deployed 5,000 operatives across at least six African countries, fought in Syria and Ukraine, ran a troll farm that interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, seized gold and diamond mines on three continents, marched a column of armed men toward Moscow in a mutiny against the Russian Ministry of Defense, and then — after the catering magnate died in a plane crash two months later — got absorbed into the Russian state as if the whole thing had been the plan all along. The Wagner Group is the most consequential private military company in modern history, and the story of how it worked is also the story of what happens when a government outsources violence to someone it can’t fully control.

    The Prigozhin model

    Yevgeny Prigozhin started as a hot dog vendor in 1990s St. Petersburg, built a catering empire, and earned the nickname “Putin’s chef” by winning contracts to feed the Russian military and the Kremlin. The nickname was affectionate in the way that mob nicknames are affectionate — it identified the relationship while understating its nature. By the mid-2010s, Prigozhin’s business interests had expanded from food service into three interlocking operations: mercenary warfare (Wagner Group), computational propaganda (the Internet Research Agency, which he later admitted founding, creating, and managing), and resource extraction (a network of mining companies operating in conflict zones). The three operations were not separate businesses. They were one integrated model.

    The model worked like this. A government in a fragile state — Central African Republic, Mali, Sudan, Libya, Mozambique, Burkina Faso, Niger — faced an insurgency it couldn’t suppress with its own military. Wagner offered security services: combat troops, training, close protection for the head of state. The price wasn’t cash. It was resource access — mining concessions for gold, diamonds, timber, uranium. Wagner-linked companies like Midas Resources, M Invest, and M-Finance LLC would then operate the mines, generating revenue that flowed back through Prigozhin’s corporate network. Simultaneously, the Internet Research Agency and its successors would flood the country’s social media with pro-Russian, anti-French, anti-Western propaganda, building popular support for the junta that had invited Wagner in and for Russia’s broader geopolitical positioning on the continent. Military force, economic extraction, and information warfare, operated as a single integrated business by a single individual who reported — loosely, deniably, but consistently — to the Kremlin.

    The deniability was the product’s most important feature. Because Wagner was a “private” company, Russia could project military force in Syria, Libya, CAR, Mali, and Ukraine while officially having no troops there. When Wagner fighters died — and they did, in significant numbers — the Russian government bore no political cost. When Wagner committed atrocities — and according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, Wagner has been implicated in over 1,800 civilian deaths across Africa since 2017 — Moscow could disclaim responsibility. When Wagner seized mining assets, the transactions were commercial, not governmental. The entire architecture was designed so that every action could be attributed to a private company rather than to the Russian state, even though the company was funded by state contracts, transported by Russian military aircraft, and its operations aligned precisely with Kremlin foreign policy objectives.

    How it actually operated

    Wagner emerged publicly during Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, with Dmitry Utkin — a former GRU military intelligence officer — as field commander. The group’s first significant deployment was Syria, where Wagner fighters supported the Assad regime and suffered catastrophic losses in a 2018 engagement with U.S. forces near Deir ez-Zor. The U.S. strikes killed an estimated 200 to 300 Wagner fighters. Russia denied any connection. Prigozhin denied any involvement. The dead mercenaries’ families received no official acknowledgment.

    Africa became Wagner’s primary theater from 2017 onward. In the Central African Republic, Wagner provided personal protection to President Touadéra, fought rebel factions, and seized control of diamond and gold mines — including the Ndassima gold mine, operated by Midas Resources. In Mali, Wagner aided the military junta’s counterinsurgency from 2021 to 2025, reportedly in exchange for access to some of Mali’s largest gold mines. In Madagascar, Wagner combatants protected campaign consultants whom Prigozhin had hired to aid a sitting president’s reelection campaign — and when the president lost anyway, he handed Madagascar’s state-owned chromite production to a Russian firm before leaving office. In Libya, Wagner deployed fighters in support of Khalifa Haftar. In Sudan, Wagner-linked personnel trained military forces and were later accused of providing surface-to-air missiles to one faction during the 2023 civil war.

    The personnel pipeline drew from Russian military veterans, convicts recruited from Russian prisons (a practice Prigozhin personally conducted, visiting penal colonies to offer pardons in exchange for six-month combat tours in Ukraine), and — according to Ukrainian intelligence — even recruited former Ukrainian citizens from occupied Crimea. The fighters were transported on Russian military aircraft. The 223rd Flight Unit of the Russian Air Force made at least nine flights carrying Wagner contractors to Sudan between April 2018 and February 2019. The legal fiction of private military company, the state logistics of military deployment.

    The mutiny and after

    In June 2023, Prigozhin — increasingly hostile toward Russian military leadership over Wagner’s treatment in the Ukraine war — launched a mutiny. A column of Wagner fighters seized the Russian military headquarters in Rostov-on-Don and advanced toward Moscow. The column was called off after negotiations brokered by Belarusian president Lukashenko. Two months later, on August 23, 2023, Prigozhin’s plane crashed northwest of Moscow. He was dead, along with Utkin and several other senior Wagner figures. No investigation has attributed the crash to an accident.

    The Kremlin moved immediately to absorb what Prigozhin had built. The Africa Corps — a new paramilitary formation under direct Ministry of Defense control — took over Wagner’s African operations. Pavel Prigozhin, Yevgeny’s 25-year-old son, reportedly collaborated with the defense ministry and Rosgvardiya (Russia’s National Guard) to centralize Wagner’s domestic operations and rebrand them. A February 2026 investigation by Forbidden Stories, the Dossier Center, and other outlets revealed that Russia’s foreign intelligence service, the SVR, had seized control of Wagner’s influence and propaganda network — the division known internally as “Africa Politology” or simply “The Company” — deploying approximately 100 consultants across Angola, Argentina, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Chad, Ghana, Libya, Mali, Niger, Sudan, Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Egypt, Cameroon, Benin, and Namibia between 2024 and 2025.

    The transition reveals the structural logic. Wagner was never truly private and never truly independent — it was a deniable extension of Russian state power that grew powerful enough to threaten the state that created it. When the threat materialized, the state killed the founder, absorbed the assets, and continued the operations under a new name with tighter institutional control. The Central African Republic, as of 2026, remains the sole country where the Wagner brand still operates; everywhere else, it’s Africa Corps, same personnel, same model, different letterhead. A bronze statue of Prigozhin and Utkin was inaugurated in Bangui, CAR, in December 2024 — a monument to a mercenary operation that the government it served simultaneously honors and replaces.

    What it tells you

    Wagner was not an aberration. It was the logical conclusion of a model that BCCI pioneered in finance and that Crypto AG pioneered in signals intelligence: a nominally private entity performing state functions with built-in deniability, operating across jurisdictions that individually lack the authority to see the full picture. The difference is that Prigozhin added violence and propaganda to the toolkit and fused them into a single business model — something no previous operator in the Shadowcraft universe had done at this scale. The shell company architectures that hide ownership, the sanctions evasion networks that move money and oil through shadow fleets, the influence operations that manufacture political consent — Wagner combined all of them into one org chart under one man, and when that man died, the state simply peeled the org chart off his corpse and kept running it. We cover the full Prigozhin story — from Glavset to the Internet Research Agency to Wagner to the mutiny to Africa Corps — across our Shadowcraft course, where every lecture asks the same question: what happens when the machinery of covert power outlives the person who built it?