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Mali’s release of 100 jihadists signals a dangerous capitulation, underscoring how close JNIM is to strangling Bamako into submission. The fuel blockade isn’t just economic warfare — it points to a slow-motion state collapse that could hand al-Qaeda its first national foothold, turning Mali into Africa’s Afghanistan. With over 70% of the country already controlled or contested by militants, the domino effect across Burkina Faso and Niger is no distant fear — it is an increasingly likely next step.
Mali freeing 100 jihadists is not simply a sign of junta weakness but reflects a vacuum shaped by years of Western and French policy failures. Russia’s limitations are evident, yet Turkey’s drone partnerships and a potential Mali–Senegal–Mauritania counterterrorism alignment point to a more sovereign path forward — one that moves beyond the same colonial-era actors whose Operation Barkhane coincided with JNIM’s expansion. Shifting toward multipolar security cooperation is not failure, but a strategic reset.