The United States has lifted sanctions imposed in July 2023 on three senior Malian officials over their links to Russia’s Wagner mercenary group, in a move that signals a diplomatic reset with the military-led governments of the Sahel.After close to three years, U.S. lifts sanctions on Mali officials amid improving AES ties
The United States has lifted sanctions on three senior Malian officials previously targeted for their links to Russia’s Wagner Group.This move signals a diplomatic reset and broader recalibration of U.S. policy toward the military-led governments of the Sahel region.Washington now prioritizes counterterrorism cooperation over isolating military governments, especially as jihadist threats grow in the region.
The U.S. recently resumed intelligence sharing with Mali amid reduced influence following the loss of its main base in Niger.The delisting, confirmed by the U.S. Treasury Department, applies to Mali’s Defense Minister Sadio Camara, as well as senior officers Alou Boi Diarra and Adama Bagayoko.
The three were sanctioned nearly three years ago for facilitating cooperation between Mali’s transitional government and the Wagner Group, which has since been folded into Russia’s Africa Corps structure.At the time, Washington accused Camara of traveling repeatedly to Moscow in 2021 to cement the deployment of Wagner fighters to Mali.
Then–Treasury Under Secretary Brian Nelson said the officials had exposed Mali to destabilizing activities and human rights abuses while enabling Russia’s geopolitical ambitions.Mali’s government welcomed the decision, describing it as a positive step toward normalizing ties and fostering constructive dialogue.
The reversal reflects a broader recalibration in U.S. policy toward the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), the bloc formed by Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger after military coups and subsequent ruptures with ECOWAS.The U.S. recently resumed intelligence sharing with Mali amid reduced influence following the loss of its main base in Niger.
Under President Donald Trump, Washington has shown greater willingness to engage junta-led governments if security cooperation aligns with U.S. interests.The Sahel remains one of the world’s most volatile jihadist theaters, with insurgent groups linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State expanding operations and pushing violence toward coastal West Africa.
The U.S. recently resumed intelligence sharing with Mali after losing its primary regional base in Niger, a setback that significantly reduced surveillance capacity. Last month, senior U.S. diplomat Nick Checker visited Bamako to discuss rebuilding bilateral ties.According to Bloomberg, the Malian government spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Abdoulaye Maïga publicly commented on the U.S. decision to lift sanctions, saying that removing the penalties “clears a key hurdle” Bamako had set for improving ties with Washington.
Maïga’s statement reveals that the sanctions had been a central diplomatic sticking point for Mali in its efforts to normalise relations with the United States, and that lifting them was a positive development in bilateral relations.Analysts say the sanctions lift underscores a pragmatic shift: counterterrorism cooperation now outweighs efforts to isolate military governments.
While Washington has not endorsed the coups that brought AES leaders to power, it appears determined not to cede further influence to Moscow.For Mali and its AES partners, the move signals that geopolitical doors once thought closed may be reopening, even amid their continued security ties with Russia.
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