The recent decision by Burkina Faso to sever its military agreements with France marks a clear strategic pivot in the Sahel region. For decades, Paris has been the guarantor of security in its former colonies, a posture that has now been challenged by a post-coup junta seeking alternative alliances. This move is not merely a diplomatic snub; it is a threat vector that exposes the fragility of Western influence in West Africa.
From a logistics and intelligence perspective, the withdrawal of French forces from Burkina Faso creates a vacuum. Terrorist groups such as JNIM and ISIS-GS, which have already exploited weak governance in Mali and Niger, now have a new operating space. The British Commonwealth, with its emerging focus on African partnerships, may look to fill the void, but London lacks the regional military infrastructure that France has spent decades building. The risk is a fragmentation of intel-sharing networks, which is a gift to hostile non-state actors.
For Britain, this is a double-edged sword. The Commonwealth's soft power network offers access to political leaders, but military readiness requires hard power. The Royal Navy's recent patrols in the Gulf of Guinea and the British Army's limited footprint in the region cannot match the rapid response capability that France once provided. If the junta in Ouagadougou turns to Russia's Wagner Group or Turkish drones, the calculus changes entirely. We may see a Cold War-style proxy scenario unfold in the Sahel, with cyber warfare and disinformation as the primary battle space.
The intelligence failure here is that Whitehall has been slow to adapt to the new African reality. The strategic focus has been on the Indo-Pacific and Eastern Europe, while Africa has been treated as a secondary theatre. This is a mistake. The Sahel is the soft underbelly of Europe's energy security and migration policy. Every destabilisation here creates knock-on effects in the Mediterranean and beyond.
To counter this trend, the Commonwealth must pivot from ceremonial gatherings to operational partnerships. This means sharing SIGINT capabilities, co-developing drone surveillance technology, and conducting joint exercises with African militaries. The UK's own military readiness is stretched, but targeted investments in cyber defence and light infantry training could yield disproportionate results. The window for action is closing. If Burkina Faso becomes a haven for proxy forces, the next threat vector may emerge not in the Sahel, but on the streets of Manchester or Paris.
This is a strategic inflection point. The chess pieces are moving, and Britain must decide whether to be a player or a pawn.








