Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

With the Coup in Burkina Faso, French Imperialism’s Crisis in West Africa Keeps Growing

This past Monday saw a military coup in Burkina Faso, with President Kaboré removed from power. It’s another sign of how the position of French imperialism in West Africa is being destabilized — and the French are worried.

Julien Anchaing

January 29, 2022
Facebook Twitter Share

Last Monday evening, national television in Burkina Faso broadcast images of a group of soldiers announcing the arrest and forced resignation of President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré. The situation in Burkina Faso had been deteriorating for several weeks, particularly after the resignation of Prime Minister Dabiré following the massive mobilizations last December.

This is the third coup d’état in eight months in West Africa.

Another Crisis for French Imperialism

According to a Tuesday article in Africa Intelligence, French diplomats and military personnel had been preparing since September for the possibility of a coup organized by the Burkina Faso army and had proposed an emergency exfiltration of President Kaboré on Sunday. The crisis is part of a serious destabilization of the French position in the region, which has flowed from earlier coups in Guinea and especially Mali; growing and deepening rejection of imperialism and military operations, such as Operation Barkhane; and now the Burkina Faso coup.

Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba (himself a French-trained soldier), who led the coup, characterized it as necessitated by the inability of the state to deal with the proliferation of terrorist groups such as al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and the Islamic State and their attacks, which have displaced more than 1.6 million people over the past three years. Following its takeover, the military announced a curfew, closed the country’s borders, and suspended the central government, the National Assembly, and the constitution.

The army’s action underscores the powerlessness of the Kaboré government to deal with the jihadist attacks that have killed more than 2,000 people in recent months. It masks the army’s own responsibility for serious abuses, such as those denounced in 2020 by journalist Rémi Carayol in OrientXXI, including raids and massacres perpetrated on civilian populations by the army in its alleged fight against rebel and jihadist groups in rural areas. Meanwhile, the French army has played an important role as a genuine occupation force in the rural areas of West African and the Sahel through Operation Barkhane.

The specter of additional destabilization of the French position, beyond what is already unfolding in Mali and Guinea, is quite worrisome to France and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). French president Emmanuel Macron has condemned the military coup in Burkina Faso, while indicating he would continue to rely on collective decisions of ECOWAS. Keep in mind that by organizing a historic embargo against Mali, ECOWAS has recently demonstrated its role as subordinated to French imperialism’s interests in the region.

Out with French Imperialism! Out with the Military!

The promise of a return to a “constitutional order accepted by all” recalls the images of the ousting of Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta in Mali in August 2020, before the current Malian president Assimi Goïta announced a democratic transition planned for in 2025. As usual, Macron denounced the coup based on his flexible reading of and respect for the constitution; he had supported the 2021 coup in Chad led by ousted president Idriss Déby’s own son.

This crisis creates new openings in the region for other powers. This could explain the statements made by Yevgeny Prigozhin, the Russian businessman (reputed to be close to Putin) and presumed leader of the Russian paramilitary organization the Wagner Group — which is already causing much concern in Mali. Prigozhin has indicated that he would like to share his experience with Burkina Faso’s military. However, there can be no confidence of any kind in Russia and its paramilitary groups for some sort of fight against imperialism.

This crisis also unfolds in the context of the Malian government’s repeated demands for the withdrawal of Danish troops from the Takuba operation in its territory, as a warning to the increasingly complex French position in the country.1Translator’s note: The Takuba Task Force is a Swedish-led military task force that is advising and assisting the Malian armed forces, and even accompanying the Malians in some active deployments on the ground.

In this situation, the military position of France and the region, along with its regional vassals organized by ECOWAS, must be strongly denounced. Imperialist aggression by France and its allies is creating legitimacy for militarized states in Mali and now Burkina Faso. We can have no illusions in any of the local coup governments. As we wrote previously

But it is not by backing the military that they will put an end to neocolonial domination. The working class and all the exploited and oppressed will very quickly find that a dead end. They must find a way to build their own political organization that is class-based and independent of the imperialists, but also independent of the army and of the different factions within the national bourgeoisie, which since Mali’s independence has demonstrated that it knows how to continue accommodating foreign powers.

First published in French on January 27 in Révolution Permanente.

Translation by Scott Cooper

Notes

Notes
1 Translator’s note: The Takuba Task Force is a Swedish-led military task force that is advising and assisting the Malian armed forces, and even accompanying the Malians in some active deployments on the ground.
Facebook Twitter Share

Middle East-Africa

U.S. Imperialism Is Pushing Tensions in the Middle East to a Boiling Point

U.S. Imperialism's support for Israel is driving the tensions behind Iran's attack and the escalations in the Middle East. It is all the more urgent for the working class to unite with the movement for Palestine against imperialism and chart a way out of the crisis in the region.

Samuel Karlin

April 15, 2024
Destruction in Gaza following Israeli invasion.

From Cease-Fire to Liberation

With over 30,000 dead and much of Gaza turned into rubble, a ceasefire is insufficient, even more so if it does not include an immediate and permanent withdrawal of all Israeli troops and an end to the siege on Gaza.

James Dennis Hoff

March 6, 2024

The United States Is Trapped in the Middle East

As a result of Israel’s offensive on Gaza, the United States is again becoming deeply entrenched in the Middle East. This is a humiliating blow to President Biden, who promised to reassert U.S. imperialism by moving away from direct involvement in the region.

Samuel Karlin

February 22, 2024

With Rafah in the Crosshairs, the Working Class Can Stop the Genocide in Gaza

As Israel prepares an invasion of Rafah, workers’ organizations around the world must take action before it's too late.

James Dennis Hoff

February 21, 2024

MOST RECENT

LAPD cracking down on the UCLA Palestine solidarity encampment on the evening of May 1.

Solidarity with the UCLA Encampment against Zionists and the LAPD

The Gaza Solidarity Encampment at UCLA was attacked by a mob of Zionists, then brutally cleared by the LAPD. The encampments need our full solidarity against cops and Zionists.

Julia Wallace

May 2, 2024
Healthcare workers at a pro-Palestine rally. Sign reads "Healthcare workds for a free palestine"

Healthcare Workers Stand in Solidarity with the Student Movement against Repression and for a Free Palestine

In response to the repression that university students have faced in the last weeks, we urge healthcare workers and their unions around the world to sign a solidarity letter against repression and for a free Palestine.

Mike Pappas

May 2, 2024
Police begin to storm City College of New York, CUNY Palestine solidarity encampment on the evening of April 30, 2024.

City University of New York Workers Announce Wildcat Sickout After NYPD Arrests Over 100 of Their Students and Colleagues

CUNY workers announced a wildcat sickout after NYPD raided City College's Gaza Solidarity Encampment. It's the first known job action in the PSC union’s 52-year history.

Left Voice

May 1, 2024
NYPD arrest protesters at City College of New York, CUNY, following a raid on the encampment for Palestine. April 30, 2024.

All Out for Gaza and against Police Repression on May Day

Just hours before May Day, NYPD attacked peaceful pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia University and City College. As we march for a free Palestine, the working class must also march against the repression faced by those who stand up against the genocide.