Washington makes military aid overtures to Sahel juntas

Above, Malian policemen form a cordon as pro-junta demonstrators hold banners and chant slogans while opposing political parties protest in front of the Palais de la Culture Amadou Hampate in Bamako on May 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 25 August 2025
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Washington makes military aid overtures to Sahel juntas

  • In recent weeks several senior American figures have paid visits to the capitals of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger
  • Trump has brought US access to key minerals front and center of his negotiations with foreign countries

ABIDJAN: Under President Donald Trump the United States has reset relations with west Africa’s military leaders on a mutual back-scratching basis, bartering help fighting militants for the Sahel region’s mining riches, experts say.
While Joe Biden was in office the US suspended most of the development and military aid it sent to Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger in the wake of the rash of coups that brought juntas to power in the three restive countries between 2020 and 2023.
Trump’s return to the White House has shifted the US away from that stance, as part of a wider pivot in Washington’s African foreign policy and its attempts to counter Russia and China’s influence on the continent.
“Trade, not aid... is now truly our policy for Africa,” Troy Fitrell, the State Department’s top official for African affairs, told an audience in Abidjan, Ivory Coast in May.
In recent weeks several other senior American figures have paid visits to the capitals of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, which have all been struggling to root out militants linked to Al-Qaeda or the Daesh group for more than a decade.
In early July, Rudolph Atallah, a security and counterterrorism adviser to Trump, visited Mali to offer the “American solution” for the unrest.
“We have the necessary equipment, the intelligence and the forces to stand up to this menace. If Mali decides to work with us, we’ll know what to do,” Atallah was quoted as saying by the country’s state newspaper.
Several days later, William B. Stevens, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for West Africa, likewise raised the possibility of private American investment in the anti-militant fight to an audience in the Malian capital Bamako, after stop-offs in Ouagadougou and Niamey.
“Washington offered to kill the leaders of militant groups, in exchange for access to lithium and gold for American businesses,” said Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel program at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, a think tank affiliated with Germany’s conservative CDU party.
Trump has brought US access to key minerals front and center of his negotiations with foreign countries, including in his attempts to end the Russia-Ukraine war and the long-running conflict between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Mali is among Africa’s top producers of gold and lithium, a key component in the electric car batteries necessary for the transition to a low-carbon economy in the age of climate change.
Burkina Faso likewise possesses rich veins of gold, while Niger’s uranium deposits make the desert nation among the world’s top exporters of the radioactive metal.
Although all three Sahel juntas came to power while promising the people greater control and sovereignty over their country’s mineral wealth, the officers in charge have welcomed Washington’s change in tack.
“We have to look at investment, the potential of our countries,” said Mali’s Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop in July, hailing “today’s convergence of viewpoints between the American administration and the government of Mali.”
Laessing argued that “some officials in the State Department, worried about the end of USAID and the closure of embassies, pointed out Mali’s rich resources to the Trump administration as a way to encourage it to remain engaged and keep the American embassy in Bamako open, at a point where Russia and China are expanding their influence in the region.”
But for Liam Karr, an analyst at the American Enterprise Institute, any critical minerals deal would be “a much longer-term project.”
“The terrorism threat is the biggest issue... stabilising the region is key to any investment hopes,” Karr argued.
Washington’s courting of the Sahel states comes despite the juntas pivoting toward Russia, having cut ties with the West and former imperial ruler France in particular since the coups.
Moscow has sent mercenaries from the infamous Wagner paramilitary organization, and its successor the Africa Corps, to help the Sahel countries’ armies push back the militants.
After Niger nationalized the local branch of French uranium giant Orano, the Kremlin, which commands the world’s largest arsenal of nuclear weapons, said it wished to mine the radioactive metal in the west African country itself.
So far, Russia’s foothold in the region has yet to provoke the White House’s ire.
In his visit to Mali, security adviser Atallah said he saw no problem with Moscow’s presence in the region, insisting that the country was “free to choose its partners.”
“Since the French were kicked out... and Russia welcomed into the region, Trump sees no problem in accompanying and/or supporting Russian efforts in the region. The fact that the Russians eschew democratic values and human rights promotion also aligns with the Trump administration’s transactional approach to relations between states,” Bisa Williams, a former US ambassador to Niger, said.
Williams, now a consultant and academic, said Trump could strike an agreement that “would guarantee majority or near-majority ownership and a high percentage of extracted minerals in exchange for support fighting terrorism.”
That could involve the deployment of American mercenaries, along the lines of how Russia used Wagner, Williams said.
“That way, he wouldn’t have to defend the policy before Congress or his MAGA base.”


UK Police probe pepper spray assault at Heathrow Airport car park

Updated 8 min 6 sec ago
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UK Police probe pepper spray assault at Heathrow Airport car park

  • Armed officers arrested a 31-year-old man on suspicion of assault after responding to the scene
  • Passengers complained about having missed flights due to public transport disruption in the area
LONDON: UK police were probing on Sunday an assault involving pepper spray at a Heathrow Airport car park that disrupted travel and left 21 people, including a three-year-old girl, needing medical treatment.
In a depature from an earlier account of the incident at Terminal 3’s multi-story car park, London’s Metropolitan Police said it now appeared to have stemmed from a suitcase robbery by people known to each other.
Commander Peter Stevens, who had previously characterised it as an argument that escalated into a fight, said investigators had pieced together the chaotic chain of events after reviewing CCTV and interviewing witnesses.
“At this stage, it’s understood that a woman was robbed of her suitcase by a group of four men, who sprayed a substance believed to be pepper spray in her direction,” he added.
“This occurred within a car park lift, with those in the lift and surrounding area affected by the spray.
“Our officers are working to determine the full circumstances around what happened but we do believe this to be an isolated incident with those directly involved known to each other.”
Armed officers arrested a 31-year-old man on suspicion of assault after responding to the scene shortly after 8am (0800 GMT).
“He remains in custody and enquiries remain ongoing to locate further suspects,” police said in an update.
Emergency responders treated 21 patients, with five taken to hospital, the London Ambulance Service said.
The three-year-old received treatment at the scene, with all the injuries “not believed to be life-changing or life-threatening,” according to police.
Firefighters provided “specialist assistance” at the scene, London’s Fire Brigade said.
Terminal 3 at Europe’s busiest airport remained open throughout, but the incident prompted severe traffic and public transport disruption in the area, according to officials and reports.
Passengers complained about having missed flights due to its impact.
“We were literally stuck for an hour-and-a-half,” Jayesh Patel, whose family were headed to the airport for a flight to India, told AFP.
“We ran to the gate, and we missed the check-in by three minutes, and we were turned away.
“So we’re gonna have to drive 100 miles back home.”