Wagner Group — Mali deployment history
The Wagner Group’s Mali deployment, 2021–2025 — the junta’s first Russian partner, reorganised into the Africa Corps.
Broad area of activity
Bamako and the northern and central garrison network, 2021–2025.
Notable history
Deployed from December 2021 as France withdrew, roughly a thousand personnel gave the junta a partner without governance conditions. It fought the 2023 northern campaign that retook Kidal, suffered its worst African defeat at Tinzaouatène in July 2024, and was repeatedly implicated — including in the March 2022 Moura operation — in mass civilian killings documented by UN reporting. In June 2025 Wagner announced departure; personnel and functions largely transferred to the Africa Corps. This record covers the organisation’s role in the Mali conflict module only; Vigil scopes force records to the theatre they operate in, and a future global-entity model may connect theatre-specific roles across modules.
Strengths
Combat experience, willingness to take casualties, no political conditions.
Limitations
Attrition without replacement depth; conduct that generated recruitment for the insurgency; opaque financing tied to concession arrangements.
Lineage & institutional history
Predecessors: Wagner Group global structure (post-2023 under Russian MoD control)
Successors: Africa Corps — Mali role
Nominally contracted by the Malian government; in practice an arm of Russian state policy, folded under Ministry of Defence control after the 2023 mutiny and rebranded in Mali as Africa Corps in June 2025.
Related locations
Tinzaouatène: The July 2024 battle here was the group’s heaviest publicly documented loss in Africa.
Key events
Wagner-linked forces arrive
Russian personnel described by Western governments as Wagner Group contractors — and by Bamako as bilateral trainers — deploy to Mali as relations with France collapse.
The army retakes Kidal
Malian forces with Wagner support enter Kidal after the CSP withdraws under drone bombardment — the state's first control of the town since 2012.
Tinzaouatène — the separatists' revenge
CSP fighters, with JNIM claiming a role, rout a Malian–Wagner column near the Algerian border, killing dozens including senior Wagner figures — the group's heaviest publicly documented loss in Africa.
Wagner exits, Africa Corps remains
Wagner announces its "mission accomplished" departure from Mali; the Russian presence continues under the defence-ministry-run Africa Corps, absorbing much of the same personnel.