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  1. Full article: When Russian mercenaries from the infamous [Wagner group](https://inews.co.uk/topic/wagner-group?ico=in-line_link) arrived in Mali five years ago, it was meant to be an example of Moscow’s new role in Africa, a quick and successful projection of military power.

    This weekend’s rebel attacks, which saw the death of Mali’s defence minister, Sadio Camara, and Russian troops withdrawing from the contested town of Kidal, have not only highlighted the limits of Moscow’s reach but have also led to open disagreements within the Russian government itself.

    Since 2021, some 2,000 Russian mercenaries have been [propping up the military junta](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/what-wagner-doing-africa-dozens-fighters-killed-3196723?ico=in-line_link) – led by Assimi Goïta – in this landlocked part of West Africa, against both the Jama’at Nusrat ul-Islam wal-Muslimin (Jnim), insurgents associated with al-Qaeda, and the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), separatists from the minority Tuareg community in the north of the country.

    In recent days, though, the two groups have launched a co-ordinated series of attacks, ranging from the suicide bombing that killed Camara to the drone-supported ground operation that retook Kidal. Taking Kidal had been a symbolic victory for the Russians three years ago.

    While it’s unlikely that the Jnim-FLA alliance will seize power, or even avoid breaking apart, there are now serious questions about whether Goïta’s regime can survive.

    The Russians there are part of the Africa Corps, the organisation established to take over Wagner’s operations on the continent following its [brief and unsuccessful mutiny](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/prigozhin-where-now-wagner-group-leader-coup-jet-belarus-2437669?ico=in-line_link) in Russia in 2023.

    Whereas Wagner was very much the creation of [Yevgeny Prigozhin](https://inews.co.uk/topic/yevgeny-prigozhin?ico=in-line_link), who died in what seems like a [Kremlin assassination](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/victims-of-plane-crash-which-killed-prigozhin-had-hand-grenade-fragments-in-their-bodies-putin-claims-2667676?ico=in-line_link) shortly after the failed mutiny, the Africa Corps is closely controlled by the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence.

    In part because the GRU lacks Prigozhin’s ruthless flair for making deals with corrupt local regimes, and in part because Moscow is too distracted by the war in Ukraine, the Africa Corps has been struggling to repeat Wagner’s earlier successes.

    In 2023, a small team of military trainers deployed to [Niger](https://inews.co.uk/topic/niger?ico=in-line_link), where the Russians have begun using an air base, but more broadly there has been a general retrenchment in Africa. Negotiations with the Sudanese government over establishing a naval base on the Black Sea are on hold.

    # Abandoned dreams of being a global power

    In many ways, this is part of a wider process.

    Despite an outcry in both [Kenya](https://inews.co.uk/topic/kenya?ico=in-line_link) and [South Africa](https://inews.co.uk/topic/south-africa?ico=in-line_link) over locals being recruited to fight in Ukraine on false pretences, Moscow is still surprisingly effective at finding willing African trade partners, attracted by cheap oil and fertilisers. The closure of the [Strait of Hormuz](https://inews.co.uk/topic/strait-of-hormuz?ico=in-line_link) and subsequent spike in global prices has only strengthened Moscow’s hand. It has also been able to mobilise anti-Western sentiments to win a degree of indulgence for its Ukrainian war.

    However, it is having to [abandon dreams of being a truly global power](https://inews.co.uk/opinion/this-is-putins-moment-of-maximum-weakness-4148557?ico=in-line_link). Its Latin American allies, [Venezuela](https://inews.co.uk/topic/venezuela?ico=in-line_link) and [Cuba](https://inews.co.uk/topic/cuba?ico=in-line_link), have been under pressure to come to terms with a United States that is more willing to throw its weight around. Venezuela’s new president seems far more amenable than [Nicolás Maduro](https://inews.co.uk/topic/nicolas-maduro?ico=in-line_link), her predecessor who is languishing in American custody following a [smash-and-grab US raid](https://inews.co.uk/news/how-us-raid-capture-venezuelas-president-unfolded-4146763?ico=in-line_link) on Caracas in January.

    Meanwhile, the new government in [Syria](https://inews.co.uk/topic/syria?ico=in-line_link) is talking about making the two Russian bases still there into joint Russian-Syrian training centres, and closer to home, bases in Armenia and Tajikistan are being run down, as equipment and personnel are raided to help fuel the [Ukraine war](https://inews.co.uk/topic/russia-ukraine-war?ico=in-line_link). Russia’s force maintained in Transnistria, a separatist region of Moldova, is now cut off, shrinking, and may not remain there for long.

    This was perhaps inevitable. [Vladimir Putin](https://inews.co.uk/topic/vladimir-putin?ico=in-line_link) has made it clear that the Ukraine war is his absolute priority, and men and military gear has been transferred from elsewhere to the front. Besides, much of Moscow’s success in Africa was really down to Western withdrawals. In Mali, Wagner filled a vacuum left when France withdrew a contingent fighting the Jnim.

    Even so, it is a bitter pill for Moscow to swallow, and tensions are rising as everyone tries to avoid responsibility for these embarrassing reversals.

    The Africa Corps itself blamed “Ukrainian and European mercenaries” for their latest setbacks, while Russian war correspondent Yevgeny Poddubny claimed that “the Western media have provided serious and coordinated information support to the terrorist groups”.

    Behind the scenes, though, the GRU has expressed fury with the Russian foreign ministry for – as it sees it – downplaying its successes and publicising this defeat. Meanwhile, some generals are questioning whether the forces committed to Africa would be better used closer to home. Uncertain what line to take, Russian state media has conspicuously avoided coverage of the story.

    None of this has a direct impact on Putin’s iron grip on the country, but it highlights growing tensions within the Russian elite. Africa, in itself, matters to very few of them, but it is part of a sense of growing pressures and accumulated small reversals.

    Four years into Russia’s war with Ukraine, the struggles of the Africa Corps is further adding to the atmosphere of dejection and recrimination.

  2. Being under direct control of the GRU is a key factor. They would be likely to use the same military doctrine/tactics that have resulted in such heavy losses in Ukraine, and would be similarly unable to adapt. That was their undoing in Afghanistan too, nearly 50 years ago. I guess winning quickly in Georgia and Chechnya convinced them that Afghanistan was a fluke, and they’ve likely already erased from their memory the sight of Ukraine’s counterattacks following the 2014 mini invasion.

    Syria has also rejected Russia, most recently with the airfield that was once useful to ship materiel to.

    The tiny bald Tsar just can’t seem to catch a break these days. If I caught him, I’d give him quite a few.

  3. The correct headline is: the dream of being a superpower is abandoning russia and putin 

  4. The dream is over but the nightmare just began. First they lose power abroad,  then they start losing power at home, and when the enemies smell blood in the water,  sharks will feast

  5. BreadfruitOdd9974 on

    when withdrawing from kidal, mali (popuation ~26,000) is instrumental in your global influence projections, you never had a chance.

  6. Puti had it all, infiltrating half of Europe and extracting amazing wealth from central Africa, incursions into Latin America (Nicaragua, Brazil, Ecuador…) – all based on their oil wealth which allowed them to buy off politicians worldwide. He could have bought off half the world or more and he had over a trillion dollars stashed away offshore. There was nothing holding him back except his grandiose dreams of rebuilding the USSR. Then he invaded Ukraine and 4 years later that’s now his grave.

  7. Tall_Pressure7042 on

    The dream has never existed to begin with for Russia. It is becoming inevitable once Russian war machine crumbles.

  8. lacerantplainer on

    russia has scored a giant own goal. Before they attacked Ukraine, they had standing. Now they are only a large gas station with nukes. And Ukrainian sanctions are closing their pumps.

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