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Conflict Module · Sahel · Force Atlas

JNIM — Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims

Force Atlas / JNIM — Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims

Formation

JNIM — Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims

The al-Qaeda-aligned insurgent coalition formed in 2017 under Iyad Ag Ghaly — the strongest non-state force in the war.

JNIM & lineageVolunteer / irregularArmed movementSubordination unknownAl-Qaeda-aligned insurgent coalition — the war’s strongest non-state force

Broad area of activity

Operates across every region of Mali and into Burkina Faso, Niger and littoral West Africa; strongest in central Mali and, since 2025, expanding hard into the west and south.

Notable history

Formed in March 2017 as a merger of Ansar Dine, AQIM’s Saharan emirate, al-Mourabitoun and Katiba Macina under Iyad Ag Ghaly — a Tuareg rebel-aristocrat turned jihadist whose career spans every phase since the 1990s. JNIM built a franchise model on local grievance: protection, taxation, and sharia adjudication where the state offers nothing. From 2025 it converted rural depth into economic siege — the fuel blockade — and in 2026 into coordinated offensives with the FLA that took Kidal and besieged Anéfis.

Strengths

Rural depth across three countries; recruitment on grievance the state keeps generating; economic-warfare sophistication; patient, negotiation-capable leadership.

Limitations

Cannot hold major cities against air power; taxation and blockades corrode the population support it cultivates; the FLA alignment and the IS-Sahel rivalry both constrain it; leadership succession after Ag Ghaly is untested.

Subordinate & associated

Related organisations

  • Islamic State Sahel ProvinceOpposed · high confidence

    Rival and battlefield competitor since 2019–2020 — never a single “jihadist” bloc. Local truces and territorial seams exist, but the rivalry is structural.

  • Azawad Liberation Front (FLA)Reported tactical cooperation · as of 2026-07 · moderate confidence

    Operational coordination reported and widely assessed in the 2026 offensives (Kidal, Anéfis). The two organisations have different objectives — this is battlefield alignment against a common enemy, not ideological unity or merger.

Lineage & institutional history

Formed 2017-03-02

Formal parent institution: Publicly pledged to al-Qaeda; the degree of operational direction from al-Qaeda’s central leadership is debated — day-to-day command is autonomous under Iyad Ag Ghaly.

Related locations

Bamako–Dakar corridor: The fuel-blockade campaign announced September 2025. Anéfis: Reported fighting alongside the FLA in the July 2026 battle — operational coordination, reported and dated, not a merged command. Gao: Among the towns struck in the coordinated waves of April and July 2026; the city remained government-held.

Key events

2 Mar 2017high confidence

Formation of JNIM

Ansar Dine, AQIM's Saharan emirate, al-Mourabitoun and Katiba Macina merge into Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin under Iyad Ag Ghaly, pledging allegiance to al-Qaeda.

25 Apr – May 2026high confidence

April 2026 offensive — Kidal falls, the defence minister is killed

The FLA and JNIM launch the war's largest coordinated offensive since 2012: the FLA takes Kidal as government and Russian forces withdraw from the far north, reportedly under negotiated terms; a car bombing at Kati kills Defence Minister Sadio Camara; IS-Sahel seizes the Labbezanga border post. JNIM claims wide gains around Mopti, and reportedly follows with checkpoints on Bamako's approaches.

4 – 10 Jul 2026high confidence

July 2026 nationwide attacks and the battle for Anéfis

A second coordinated wave hits Anéfis, Aguelhok, Gao, Sévaré and Kéniéroba, later Konna and Somadougou. FLA and JNIM fighters besiege the Anéfis base, ambush a Malian–Africa Corps relief convoy near Tabrichat and down an Mi-24; a second column from Gao breaks through and the army announces the town retaken on 10 July, at a stated cost of about 30 soldiers.

Sensitivity: Delayed · contextualAssessment confidence: moderateStatus as of 2026-07Reviewed 2026-07-15Sources: International Crisis Group · ACLED conflict data & analysis · Africa Center for Strategic Studies · Armed-group statements (JNIM, FLA, IS-Sahel and others)Methodology