US lifts sanctions on 3 senior Malian officials

Malian Defence Minister Sadio Camara (left) and transitional leader Assimi Goita during an official engagement in Bamako, as the United States lifts sanctions in a shift toward renewed Sahel cooperation

The United States has lifted sanctions against three senior Malian officials previously accused of maintaining ties with Russia’s Wagner mercenary network, signalling a significant shift in Washington’s strategy toward military-led governments in Africa’s Sahel region.

A notification issued by the US Treasury Department confirmed that Defence Minister Sadio Camara, alongside senior military figures Alou Boi Diarra and Adama Bagayoko, were removed from the sanctions list on Friday. The officials had been sanctioned over alleged cooperation with the Wagner Group, the Russian private military company whose operations have since been reorganised under Moscow’s state-backed Africa Corps.

There was no immediate response from Mali’s transitional government following the announcement.

The decision underscores a broader recalibration by the Trump administration, which has increasingly prioritised counterterrorism cooperation and geopolitical competition over governance concerns that previously shaped US engagement in the region.
The lifting of sanctions reflects Washington’s recognition that isolating Sahelian military governments has reduced Western influence while allowing rival powers, particularly Russia, to deepen security partnerships. By re-engaging Mali despite its military leadership, the US appears to be pursuing a more pragmatic strategy centred on shared security interests and regional stability.

Nick Checker, the United States’ senior envoy for Africa, visited Mali last month to explore pathways toward rebuilding bilateral relations, according to the State Department. The visit followed earlier moves by Washington to resume intelligence-sharing with Bamako aimed at strengthening operations against jihadist groups active across the Sahel.

Relations between Mali and Western partners deteriorated sharply after the country turned to Wagner forces following the withdrawal of French troops, prompting sanctions and diplomatic distancing from the United States and European allies.

Security considerations now appear to be reshaping US calculations.

Cameron Hudson, a former US intelligence and State Department official specialising in Africa, said the policy shift reflects efforts to restore cooperation that had eroded in recent years.

‘The US in recent months has substantially increased its engagement with Malian authorities in an effort to restart counterterrorism cooperation,’ Hudson told Reuters, adding that Washington is signalling it will no longer disengage solely because governments are led by military authorities.

The Sahel remains one of the world’s fastest-growing theatres of extremist violence, with groups affiliated to al-Qaeda and Islamic State expanding operations across Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.

Beyond security concerns, analysts say geopolitical rivalry is shaping Washington’s renewed outreach. The Sahel region holds significant reserves of gold and uranium, resources that have drawn increasing attention from global powers competing for influence.

Russia has strengthened its footprint through security agreements and military cooperation, particularly after Western withdrawals reduced their presence on the ground.

Under the previous US administration, Washington lost its primary intelligence base in neighbouring Niger after authorities expelled American forces and prohibited surveillance flights. The move significantly weakened US monitoring capabilities across the region.

Re-engagement with Mali could help restore parts of that intelligence network, improving the United States’ ability to track militant movements and regional instability.

The decision to lift sanctions is likely to attract criticism from advocates who argue engagement risks legitimising governments that came to power through coups.

However, supporters of the shift contend that isolation failed to produce democratic transitions while simultaneously weakening Western strategic influence.

By easing sanctions while reopening security channels, Washington appears to be adopting a transactional foreign policy approach — one focused on stabilisation and strategic presence rather than political alignment.

For Mali’s leadership, the delisting may open the door to broader diplomatic engagement with Western partners even as ties with Russia remain intact. For the United States, the move signals a recognition that influence in the Sahel increasingly depends on engagement rather than exclusion, as global competition for security and resources intensifies across Africa.

Credit: Africabriefing.com

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