Home Security

Sweden ditch European special forces mission over Russian presence

Kazim Abdul by Kazim Abdul
January 17, 2022
in Security
Reading Time: 2 mins read
ADVERTISEMENT
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Sweden is withdrawing its troops from a European special forces mission to the Sahel region and will review its participation in a U.N. force in Mali over the presence of private Russian military contractors, the Foreign Minister Ann Linde said.

About 150 Swedish special forces troops were deployed in September 2020 under the EU-sponsored multinational task force Takuba, to support the Malian security forces.

military.africa/2020/09/150-swedish-special-operations-troops-prepare-for-malian-deployment

The deployment was also meant to assist France in Operation Barkhane, a regional crisis management effort that is considered vital to Europe.

You Might Also Like

India, Egypt looks to deepen military co-operation

“Act of War” Rwanda attacks DRC’s SU-25 aircraft as threat of invasion looms

French forces asked to leave Burkina Faso amid closer ties with Russia

Sweden is leaving these two commitments after Foreign Minister Ann Linde criticized Mali’s military junta for trying to extend its grip on power and for hiring the Russian mercenaries. The mission was slated to end in March and was to last for two years.

“We have already decided that this year we will withdraw (from) the force of Takuba,” Ann Linde told reporters on Friday on the sidelines of an EU foreign ministers meeting in western France, referring to the European task force.

“The question is what do we do with Minusma,” she said, referring to the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Mali.

ADVERTISEMENT

In April last year, the Swedish Army said 3 of its personal and members of the European special forces mission in Mali were hurt by a roadside bomb in the east of the country.

TF Takuba was established after French President Emmanuel Macron decided to reduce its 5,000-strong Barkhane force from the Sahel.

military.africa/2020/11/war-weary-france-plans-troops-drawdown-in-africa

Task Force Takuba reached its initial operating capability (IOC) on 15 July.

Takuba comprises some 14 European countries, including Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, the Netherlands, and Portugal which provided special forces, logistical and tactical support to work alongside regional troops.

Two days ago, angered by ECOWAS’s financial and economic sanctions, Mali’s junta has now called on citizens to protest against the punitive measures.

Malians took to the streets by the thousands on Friday, after the military junta called for protests against stringent sanctions imposed by the West Africa bloc ECOWAS over delayed elections. 

France is pressing the European Union to agree sanctions against Mali after its military-dominated leadership shelved a timetable for elections, the French foreign minister said on Wednesday.

Recommended posts

Tags: MaliSwedenTask Force Takuba

Join 154,765 others in receiving our trusted defence news

Unsubscribe

Related News

Despite conflict in Europe, Russia fulfills Mali’s airpower agreement

Despite conflict in Europe, Russia fulfills Mali’s airpower agreement

January 20, 2023
Mali Bayraktar TB2 arrives but without Canadian sub-system

Mali Bayraktar TB2 arrives but without Canadian sub-system

January 4, 2023
Turkish Turaç completes firearms and explosives handling training  to Mali military

Turkish Turaç completes firearms and explosives handling training to Mali military

December 21, 2022
US donates URO VAMTAC tactical armoured vehicle to Mali

US donates URO VAMTAC tactical armoured vehicle to Mali

November 30, 2022
ADVERTISEMENT

Facebook

ADVERTISEMENT
en_US
fr_FR ar ru_RU zh_CN tr_TR en_US
en_US English
en_US English
fr_FR Français
ar العربية
ru_RU Русский
zh_CN 简体中文
tr_TR Türkçe