Mali developments — 15 July 2026
A second nationwide attack wave hits five towns from the Algerian border to Bamako's approaches; the FLA and JNIM besiege Anéfis for six days, ambush a Malian–Africa Corps relief convoy and down an Mi-24 before the army retakes the town at a stated cost of about 30 soldiers; Russia and the AES states pledge deeper military cooperation at Niamey; and Mali and Algeria restore ambassadors and reopen their airspace after fifteen months.
Coordinated attacks strike five towns across Mali in a single day
On 4 July armed groups attacked at least five positions simultaneously: Anéfis, Aguelhok and Gao in the north, Sévaré in the centre, and the Kéniéroba prison south of Bamako. The army said it later also repelled attacks at Konna and Somadougou with Africa Corps support, and declared the situation "totally under control", reporting 20 fighters killed at Sévaré and six at Gao against one pro-government fighter killed and four wounded at Gao. The Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) and JNIM both claimed involvement. Sabotage disrupted Bamako's water and power on 7 July.
Why it matters. The geography is the message: one coordinated wave reaching from the Algerian border to the capital's southern approaches, a little over two months after the April offensive that took Kidal. It demonstrates command, timing and reach across the whole country. It does not demonstrate control — the attacked towns were attacked, not held, and every casualty figure here is a claim by a party to the fighting.
Anéfis besieged for six days, then retaken — the corridor to Kidal contested
Fighting around Anéfis began on 4 July and intensified on 5 July around the military base, which FLA and JNIM fighters encircled after the FLA claimed to have entered the town. Reinforcements and helicopters deployed from Gao; the relief convoy was ambushed and an Mi-24 was downed near Tabrichat, some 55km southwest of Anéfis. A second column from Gao, backed by Africa Corps personnel, broke through on the evening of 9 July, and the army announced on 10 July that it had retaken the town. The army chief said about 30 soldiers were killed and dozens wounded in the operation. ACLED's assessment notes substantial personnel and materiel losses on both sides.
Why it matters. Anéfis sits on the junction of the Gao–Kidal road — the only overland approach to the north's political prize, which the FLA has held since April. The six-day battle is the clearest test yet of whether the government and its Russian partners can still project force up that corridor, and whether the FLA–JNIM alignment can hold ground against a determined relief effort. The answer so far is that both can move but neither can hold cheaply: the town changed hands twice in a week.
Relief convoy carrying Malian and Africa Corps personnel ambushed in the north
On the morning of 9 July, FLA fighters and JNIM allies attacked a convoy of Russian Africa Corps personnel and Malian soldiers moving to relieve the besieged Anéfis base. Reporting citing local and security sources describes a force of over 200 Russian fighters and around 100 Malian soldiers in the column; the FLA claimed responsibility. Casualty figures for the ambush itself are not independently established, though reporting refers to claims of dozens of Russian fighters killed. The Africa Corps had already withdrawn from Kidal in April, with Russian state media acknowledging deaths and captured equipment at the time.
Why it matters. Convoys are where Mali's war is actually decided. The ambush shows the insurgents' priority is not the towns but the roads between them — and it puts Russian personnel, not just Malian ones, at the centre of the losses. Since the June 2025 rebrand from Wagner, the presence is formal Russian defence-ministry policy, so every ambush is now a publicised test of Russian prestige as well as a military event.
Russia and the Sahel states pledge deeper military cooperation at Niamey
On 9 July, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met the foreign ministers of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger in Niamey. The parties welcomed "growing military and military-technical cooperation", including Africa Corps assistance, and discussed defence, counterterrorism, military training and infrastructure. A memorandum establishing regular Russia–AES consultations was signed.
Why it matters. The timing — mid-offensive, days after Russian personnel were ambushed in the north — is the point. Moscow is formalising a regional framework at the moment its partner's position is under the most pressure since the coups, binding three governments and their security to one patron. For the AES it converts three bilateral dependencies into a bloc relationship; for Russia it institutionalises the position that replaced the French and UN order.
Mali and Algeria restore ambassadors and reopen airspace after fifteen months
On 10–11 July, Mali's authorities said they would restore the Algerian ambassador in Bamako and open Malian airspace to all civilian and military aircraft flying to or from Algeria; President Tebboune ordered Algeria's ambassador back to Bamako. The rupture dated to early April 2025, after Mali accused Algeria of shooting down a Malian military drone near Tinzaouatène — both states recalled ambassadors, closed airspace, and Mali took the case to the International Court of Justice. Reporting notes the reset revives prospects for trade, transport links and the trans-Saharan corridor.
Why it matters. Algeria brokered every peace agreement in Mali's modern history, including the 2015 Algiers Agreement that Bamako terminated in 2024, and it is the only external actor with standing to talk to every northern party. Restoring ties is not the same as restoring a peace process — but with Kidal in FLA hands and no negotiating framework in existence, it reopens the one channel that could produce something other than a military outcome in the north.
- Algeria and Mali restore diplomatic ties following yearlong rift
- Mali and Algeria reopen airspace and reinstate ambassadors, ending a yearlong rift