Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Africa Corps”
Libya as Russia's Strategic Logistics Hub in Africa
Libya has never fit the Africa Corps model quite as cleanly as CAR or Mali. Russia’s engagement there is not primarily about counterinsurgency support to a fragile government — it is about projecting power into the Mediterranean and maintaining a logistics corridor that serves Russia’s broader African operations. Libya is less a client state than a strategic platform.
Wagner personnel reportedly began supporting Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army around 2018, as Haftar positioned himself as a rival to the internationally recognized government in Tripoli. U.S. Africa Command assessed Wagner’s presence at roughly 2,000 personnel as of 2020, describing their role as vital to the LNA’s 2019–2020 campaign to seize Tripoli — a campaign that ultimately failed. Those numbers declined in 2022 as some operators were pulled toward Ukraine, and current figures remain uncertain.
Mali and the Cost of Russia's Sahel Partnership
Mali is where Russia’s Africa strategy produced its most dramatic geopolitical realignment — and where the limits of that strategy have become most visible. The Russian presence there displaced a significant French and American counterterrorism effort, handed Moscow a propaganda victory against Western influence in the Sahel, and helped Mali’s military junta consolidate power. It has also delivered insurgent ambushes, a major battlefield embarrassment, and a security situation that has not materially improved.
Russia in the Central African Republic: The Template
The Central African Republic is where Russia’s Africa playbook was first fully field-tested, and it remains one of the clearest illustrations of how the model works in practice. Russian personnel first arrived in late 2017 — about 175 “instructors,” including Wagner operators — after Russia secured a UN arms embargo exemption to supply weapons to the Touadera government. What began as an advisory mission expanded rapidly into something far more integrated.
Russia's Military-Business Model in Africa
Over the past decade, thousands of Russian security personnel have deployed across Africa under an arrangement that analysts have taken to calling a “military-business model” — security support exchanged for payment or access to natural resources. What began as a nominally private enterprise has since been folded into the Russian state apparatus, rebranded, and extended to new theaters. The operation is larger, more institutionalized, and more geopolitically consequential than its mercenary origins might suggest.