The Malian Armed Forces (French: Forces Armées Maliennes, FAMa) consists of the Army (French: Armée de Terre), Republic of Mali Air Force (French: Force Aérienne de la République du Mali), and National Guard. They number some 7,000 and are under the control of the Minister of Armed Forces and Veterans. The Library of Congress as of January 2005 stated that "[t]he military is underpaid, poorly equipped, and in need of rationalization. Its organisation has suffered from the incorporation of Tuareg irregular forces into the regular military following a 1992 agreement between the government and Tuareg rebel forces."

In 2009, the IISS Military Balance listed 7,350 soldiers in the Army, 400 in the Air Force, and 50 in the Navy. The Gendarmerie and local police forces (under the Ministry of Interior and Security) maintain internal security. The IISS listed paramilitary total force as 4,800 personnel: 1,800 in the Gendarmerie (8 companies), 2,000 in the Republican Guard, and 1,000 police officers. A few Malians receive military training in the United States, France, and Germany.

Military expenditures total about 13% of the national budget. Mali is an active contributor to peacekeeping forces in West and Central Africa; the Library of Congress said that in 2004 Mali was participating in United Nations operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC, 28 personnel including 27 observers), Liberia (UNMIL, 252 personnel, including 4 observers), and Sierra Leone (3 observers).

History

The Malian armed forces were initially formed by Malian conscript and volunteer veterans of the French Armed Forces. In the months preceding the formation of the Malian armed forces, the French Armed Forces withdrew from their bases in Mali.

A national guard soldier walks by demonstrators at Bamako airport.

Among the last bases to be closed were those at Kati, on 8 June 1961, Tessalit (base aérienne secondaire), on 8 July 1961, Gao (base aérienne 163 de Gao), on 2 August 1961, and Air Base 162 at Bamako (base aérienne 162 de Bamako), on 5 September 1961.

On 1 October 1960, the Malian army was formally installed through a speech by Chief of Staff Captain Sekou Traore. On 12 October the same year, the army held its first parade in Bamako under the command of Captain Tiemoko Konate. The army initially consisted of a battalion in Ségou and included units scattered across the territory. A memo from the Chief of Staff ordered a realignment of the battalion. A command and services detachment in Bamako was created, and the engineer company in Ségou, the first Saharan motorized company of Gao, the Saharan Motor Company of Kidal, the Arouane nomad group, nomadic group of Timetrine (in the commune of Timtaghène), the 1st Reconnaissance Company and Nioro 2nd Reconnaissance Company Tessalit. By 16 January 1961, Mali's army totaled 1,232 men.

In the sixties and seventies, Mali's army and air force relied primarily on the Soviet Union for materiel and training.

On 19 November 1968, a group of young Malian officers staged a bloodless coup and set up a 14-member military junta, with Lieutenant Moussa Traoré as president. The military leaders attempted to pursue economic reforms, but for several years faced debilitating internal political struggles and the disastrous Sahelian drought. A new constitution, approved in 1974, created a one-party state and was designed to move Mali toward civilian rule. The military leaders remained in power.

Moussa Traoré improved relations with France and other Western countries after the coup, but Mali remained dependent on the Soviet Union for the arming and training of the Malian Armed Forces. Approximately 50 Soviet military advisors provided armour, artillery and parachute training to Mali's military, and trained all of Mali's pilots. The Soviets also improved the Malian Air Force base in Mopti, and occasionally used Malian airfields to stage supply flights for groups it supported in Angola.

Single-party presidential and legislative elections were held in June 1979, and General Moussa Traoré received 99% of the votes. His efforts at consolidating the single-party government were challenged in 1980 by student-led anti-government demonstrations, which were brutally put down, and by three coup attempts. The Traore government ruled throughout the 1970s and 1980s. On 26 March 1991, after four days of intense anti-government rioting, a group of 17 military officers, led by subsequent President Amadou Toumani Touré, arrested President Traoré and suspended the constitution. They formed a civilian-heavy provisional ruling body, and initiated a process that led to democratic elections.

The Tuareg rebellion began in 1990 when Tuareg separatists attacked government buildings around Gao. The armed forces' reprisals led to a full-blown rebellion in which the absence of opportunities for Tuareg in the army was a major complaint. The conflict died down after Alpha Konaré formed a new government and made reparations in 1992. Also, Mali created a new self-governing region, the Kidal Region, and provided for greater Tuareg integration into Malian society. In 1994, Tuareg, reputed to have been trained and armed by Libya, attacked Gao, which again led to major Malian Army reprisals and to the creation of the Ghanda Koi Songhai militia to combat the Tuareg. Mali effectively fell into civil war.

As of June 2008, service commanders were Colonel Boubacar Togola (Armée de Terre), Colonel Waly Sissoko (Armée de l'Air), Lieutenant-Colonel Daouda Sogoba (Garde Nationale) et du Colonel Adama Dembélé (Gendarmerie Nationale).

The Malian army largely collapsed during the war against Tuareg separatists and Islamist rebels in early 2012. In a span of less than fourth months at the start of 2012, the Malian army was defeated by the rebels who seized more than 60% of the former Malian territory, taking all camps and position of the army, capturing and killing hundreds of Malian soldiers, while hundred others deserted or defected.

Following the rebel advance, a group of soldiers from the Kati camp near Bamako staged a coup on 22 March 2012 which overthrew Malian president Amadou Toumani Touré. After the junta seized power, they successfully repelled a counter coup on 30 April by loyalists from the red berets elite units.

The Malian military was rebuilt by French forces, and is now capable of conducting counter terrorism operations. In February 2020, the army stated that up to 200 Malian troops arrived in Kidal, a Northern city. This was the first time the army was deployed in this area because of the Tuareg Separatists rebels that chased out the army since 2014.

On 1 November 2019, the IS-GS militants killed at least 50 soldiers in the 2019 Indelimane attack in the Ménaka Region of Mali.

Since the 2020 coup, the military received equipment from Turkish forces.

On 7 September 2023, at least 154 civilians and fifteen Malian soldiers were killed when al-Qaeda linked JNIM militants simultaneously attacked a Malian military camp at Bamba and the civilian boat Tombouctou on the Niger River near the village of Banikane, Gourma-Rharous.

In July 2024, CSP-DPA rebels and JNIM militants killed dozens of Russian mercenaries and Malian government forces during the Battle of Tinzaouaten. On 17 September 2024, JNIM militants attacked several locations across Bamako, the capital of Mali, including police and military installations, killing at least 77 people and injuring 255 others.

Army

Manpower is provided by two-year selective conscription. Mali apparently has six military regions, according to Jane's World Armies. The 1st Military Region and 13th Combined Arms Regiment may be in Gao. The 3rd Military Region appears to be at Kati. The 4th Military Region is at Kayes and the 5th Military Region is at Timbuktu.

The 512 Regiment was reported within the 5th Military Region in 2004. In 2010 Agence France-Presse reported that French training would be given to the 62nd Motorized Infantry Regiment of the 6th Military Region, based at Sévaré. The same story said that the regiment consisted of three Rapid Intervention Companies (CIR) and AFP said it was "considered the elite...of the Malian army."

Mali is one of four Saharan states which created a Joint Military Staff Committee in 2010, to be based at Tamanrasset in southern Algeria. Algeria, Mauritania, Niger, and Mali were to take part.

The 134e Escadron de Reconnaissance (reconnaissance squadron) was to be trained to operate the French ACMAT Bastion APC by the EUTM Mali.

The Army controls the small navy (approx. 130 sailors and 3 river patrol boats).

List of Malian generals
RankNameCorps of originDate of nomination
1st republic 1960 – 1968
01Général de BrigadeAbdoulaye SOUMARÉ (deceased)Infantry29 December 1960
2nd republic, 1968 – 1991
02Général d'ArméeMoussa Traoré (deceased)Infantry1974/79
03Général de DivisionAmadou Baba Diarra (deceased)Armour1981/84
04Général de DivisionFilifing SISSOKO (deceased)Air Force1982/84
05Général de DivisionSékou LY (deceased)Armour1984/86
06Général de BrigadeBougary SANGARÉ (deceased)Infantry1985/89
07Général de BrigadeAbdoulaye OUOLOGUEM (deceased)Infantry1985/89
08Général de BrigadeAmara DANFAGA (deceased)Infantry1985/90
09Général de BrigadeSory Ibrahim SILLA (deceased)Infantry1987/90
10Général de BrigadeMamadou COULIBALYAir Force1987/91
3rd republic, Alpha Oumar Konaré, 1991 – 2002
11Général d'ArméeAmadou Toumani TOURÉ (deceased)Infantry20 January 1995
12Général de DivisionBourama Siré TRAORÉAir Force1997/99
13Général de DivisionCheick O. DIARRA (deceased)Air Force1997/99
14Général de DivisionKafougouna KONÉInfantry1997/99
15Général de DivisionTiécoura DOUMBIAArtillery1997/99
16Général de BrigadeMamadou DOUCOURÉAir Force1997/99
17Général de BrigadeAbdoul Karim DIOPEngineers1997/99
18Général de BrigadeSiriman KEITA (deceased)Infantry1999/2000
3rd republic, Amadou Toumani Touré, 2002 – 2010
19Général de BrigadeSeydou TRAORÉInfantry2005
20Général de BrigadeSalif TRAORÉAir Force2006
21Général de BrigadeSadio GASSAMAInfantry1 January 2007
22Général de BrigadeToumani SISSOKOInfantry1 January 2007
23Général de BrigadePangassy SANGARÉArmour1 January 2007
24Général de BrigadeTiefolo TOGOLAInfantry1 January 2007
25Général de BrigadeBrahima COULIBALYArtillery1 January 2007
26Général de BrigadeLassana KONÉArmour1 January 2007
27Général de DivisionYoussouf BAMBAAir Force1 January 2007
28Général de DivisionSouleymane Sidibé (deceased)Gendarmerie1 January 2007
29Général de BrigadeNaïny TOURÉGendarmerie1 January 2007
30Général de DivisionGabriel POUDIOUGOUInfantry12 June 2008
31Général de BrigadeMahamane TOURÉInfantry1 October 2010
32Général de BrigadeMamadou DIALLOInfantry1 October 2010
33Général de BrigadeKalifa KEITAArmour1 October 2010
34Général de BrigadeBégrélé SIOROAir Force1 October 2010
35Général de BrigadeMamadou TOGOLAAir Force1 October 2010
36Général de BrigadeSiaka SANGARÉAir Force1 October 2010
37Général de BrigadeSamballa DIALLOGendarmerie1 October 2010
38Général de BrigadeSirakoro SANGARÉEngineers1 October 2010
39Général de BrigadeDjibril SANGARÉDCSSA1 October 2010
40Général de BrigadeMohamed COULIBALYDCSSA1 October 2010
41Général de BrigadeKani DIABATÉDCSSA1 October 2010
42Général de BrigadeMinkoro KANÉInfantry1 October 2010
43Général de BrigadeYoussouf GOÏTAInfantry1 October 2010
44Général de BrigadeYakouba SIDIBÉArtillery1 October 2010
45Général de BrigadeIsmaïla CISSÉArtillery1 October 2010
46Général de BrigadeLamine DIABIRAArmour1 October 2010
47Général de BrigadeCheick Fanta M. MAIGAAdministration1 October 2010
48Général de BrigadeHamet SIDIBÉAir Force1 October 2010
49Général de BrigadeHamidou SISSOKOGendarmerie1 October 2010
50Général de BrigadeIdrissa DJILLAEngineers1 October 2010
51Général de BrigadeSékou Hamed NIAMBÉlÉDTTA (transmission)1 October 2010
52Général de BrigadeMady MACALOUDCSSA1 October 2010
53Général de BrigadeFanta KONIPO (deceased)DCSSA1 October 2010
54Général de BrigadeAmadou Baba TOURÉ (deceased)Infantry1 October 2010
55Général de BrigadeWaly SISSOKOAir Force1 January 2012
56Général de BrigadeSoumana KOUYATEAir Force1 January 2012
57Général de BrigadeMady Boubou KAMISSOKOGendarmerie1 January 2012
58Général de BrigadeMamadou Lamine BALLOEngineers1 January 2012
59Général de BrigadeAntoine Ibrahima NIENTAODCSSA1 January 2012

Sources: 27 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine 17 February 2012: 21 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine and du 12 avril 2012: [permanent dead link]

Equipment

The goal of this list is to comprehensively catalogue Mali's current and past inventory of (armoured fighting) vehicles and heavy weaponry. Historically a major recipient of Soviet military aid, frequent arms deliveries in the 1970s and 1980s turned Mali into one of the strongest militaries in western Africa, operating advanced equipment such as dedicated tank destroyers, S-125 SAM systems and MiG-21bis jet fighters.

Equipment currently in service with the Malian Army
NameImageOriginIn serviceNotes
Tanks
T-54Soviet UnionN/A(Rarely used operationally).
PT-76 Mod. 1952N/A(Rarely used operationally).
Type-62ChinaN/A(In operational condition but not in active use).
Armoured Fighting Vehicles (AFVs)
BRDM-2Soviet UnionN/A
Infantry Fighting Vehicles (IFVs)
BMP-1Soviet UnionN/A(In operational condition but not in active use).
Armoured Personnel Carriers
BTR-152Soviet UnionN/A
BTR-60PBN/A(At least one operates without a turret).
BTR-70N/A
VN2CChinaN/A
FahdEgyptN/A
Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) Vehicles
Typhoon 4x4United Arab EmiratesN/A
GladiatorN/A
Typhoon 6x6N/A(Armed with a HMG).
Tornado 6x6N/A
Shrek OneN/A
OTT PUMA M36-15South AfricaN/A(Armed with a 12.7mm DShK).
Paramount MauraderN/A
CasspirN/A
OTT CasspirN/A(Armed with a 12.7mm DShK).
RG-31 NyalaN/A(Used by the Gendarmerie).
VP11ChinaN/A
Infantry Mobility Vehicles (IMVs)
Panhard PVPFranceN/A(Armed with a 12.7mm M2 HMG).
ACMAT BastionN/A
ACMAT BastionN/A(Ambulance).
URO VAMTACSpainN/A
Stark Motors StormQatarN/A
Kia KLTVSouth KoreaN/A(Armed with a 7.62mm PKM LMG).
VN-4ChinaN/A
CougarUnited Arab EmiratesN/A
PythonN/A(Not yet seen).
All-Terrain Vehicles (ATVs)
Lynx CS/VP11ChinaN/A
Utility Vehicles
ACMAT ALTVFranceN/A
ACMAT ALTV AmbulanceN/A
MasstecH T4N/A
Kia KM420South KoreaN/A
Kia KM450N/A
Kia KM450 AmbulanceN/A
Dongfeng EQ2500ChinaN/A
Toyota Land CruiserJapanN/A
Toyota Land Cruiser AmbulanceN/A
Toyota Land Cruiser PradoN/A
Toyota Land Cruiser GXRN/A
Nissan NP300N/A
Nissan FronteraN/A
Mitsubishi L200N/A
Land Rover DefenderUnited KingdomN/A
Land Rover DefenderN/A(Ambulance).
Towed Artillery
100mm MT-12 'Rapira'Soviet UnionN/A
122mm D-30N/A
Multiple Rocket Launchers (MRLs)
107mm Type-63ChinaN/A
122mm 9P122 'Grad-P'Soviet UnionN/A
122mm BM-21 'Grad'N/A
Mortars
60mm M57YugoslaviaN/A
82mm 82-BM-37Soviet UnionN/A
120mm PM-43N/A
(Self-propelled) Anti-Aircraft Guns
12.7mm DShKSoviet UnionN/A
14.5mm ZPU-1N/A
14.5mm QJG-02ChinaN/A
23mm ZSU-23-4 'Shilka'Soviet UnionN/A(Rarely used operationally).
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs)
Hawker Q800XFranceN/A
Trucks
ACMAT VLRA 4x4FranceN/A
ACMAT VLRA 6x6N/A
Berliet GBC-180N/A
Renault T430N/A
Renault KeraxN/A
Renault Kerax WreckerN/A
SNVI M120AlgeriaN/A
SNVI M230N/A
SNVI M350N/A
Iveco 330.30 ANWItalyN/A
Iveco EurocargoN/A
DAF 2800 6x4NetherlandsN/A
MAN KAT1 4x4GermanyN/A
MAN KAT1 6x6N/A
MAN TGS 35.440N/A
Mercedes-Benz MB1017N/A
Mercedes-Benz ActrosN/A
Mercedes-Benz AtegoN/A
Magirus EckhauberN/A(3. Generation).
Unimog 1300N/A
Unimog 1300N/A(Ambulance).
Ural-4320RussiaN/A
GAZ-3308 'Sadko'N/A
Dongfeng EQ1092FChinaN/A
Dongfeng EQ140-1CN/A
Dongfeng EQ240N/A
FAW CA1122JN/A
Howo Sinotruk 4x4N/A
Howo Sinotruk 6x6N/A
Hongyan GenlyonN/A
Jiefang J5N/A
Sachman SX2190N/A
Engineering Vehicles
Caterpillar bulldozerUnited StatesN/A
M-BootGermanyN/A

Equipment formerly in service

Equipment formerly in service
NameImageOriginIn StockNotes
Tanks
T-34/85Soviet UnionN/A
FT-17FranceN/A
Armoured Fighting Vehicles (AFVs)
BTR-40Soviet UnionN/A
9P133N/A(Some repurposed as fire-support vehicles armed with ZU-23s).
Towed Artillery
76mm ZiS-3Soviet UnionN/A
85mm D-44N/A
Multiple Rocket Launchers (MRLs)
132mm BM-13Soviet UnionN/A
Anti-Aircraft Guns
14.5mm ZPU-2Soviet UnionN/A
37mm M-1939N/A
Surface-To-Air Missile Systems (SAMs)
S-125Soviet UnionN/A
Radars
P-12/18 'Spoon Rest'Soviet UnionN/A
P-15 'Flat Face A'N/A
SNR-125 'Low Blow'N/A(for S-125), (Not yet seen).
Utility Vehicles
UAZ-452Soviet UnionN/A
UAZ-469N/A
GAZ-69N/A
Beijing BJ212ChinaN/A
VW IltisGermanyN/A
VW T3N/A
Land Rover Series IIIUnited KingdomN/A
Trucks
GAZ-66Soviet UnionN/A
ZiL-131N/A
ZiL-157N/A
MAZ-537N/A
Ural-4320 CraneRussiaN/A
Mercedes-Benz SKGermanyN/A
Mercedes-Benz 1113N/A(Double Cabin).
MAN HauberN/A
Magirus EckhauberN/A
Unimog AmbulanceN/A(Ambulance).
Renault R340FranceN/A
Unknown TruckN/AN/A
Engineering Vehicles
GSP-55Soviet UnionN/A
PTSN/A
Hanomag DozerGermanyN/A
GraderUnited StatesN/A
Unknown LoaderN/AN/A
Unknown RollerN/AN/A

Training establishments

The Malian armed forces have at least two significant training establishments:

The Alioune Bloundin Beye school is the tactical-level component of a trio of three ECOWAS peacekeeping training schools: the Alioune Bloundin Beye school (EMPABB), the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre in Accra, Ghana (operational level), and the Nigerian National Defence College (strategic level). The school has trained over 6900 students since its opening and is currently supported financially and technically by seven countries and as well as the ECOWAS.

Air Force

Malian soldiers stand MiG 21bis fighters at Bamako–Sénou International

The Mali Air Force (Armée de l'air du Mali) was founded in 1961 with French supplied military aid. This included MH.1521 Broussard utility monoplane followed by two C-47 transports until Soviet aid starting in 1962 with four Antonov AN-2 Colt biplane transports and four Mi-4 light helicopters. It used to operate MiG jets but is currently equipped with cargo aircraft, light attack aircraft and helicopters.

This article incorporates from (2003 ed.). CIA.

Further reading

  • 'Insurgency, disarmament, and insecurity in Northern Mali 1990–2004,' in Nicolas Florquin and Eric G. Berman (eds.) Armed and Aimless Armed Groups, Guns, and Human Security in the ECOWAS Region, Small Arms Survey, ISBN 2-8288-0063-6, May 2005
  • Mahamadou Nimaga, 'Mali', in Alan Bryden, Boubacar N'Diaye, 'Security Sector Governance in Francophone West Africa: Realities and Opportunities,' DCAF/Lit Verlag, 2011.
  • Jared Rudacille, " 6 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine," Monograph written as part of a degree requirement at the US School of Advanced Military Studies, November 2013. (Includes case study of US aid to security sector reform in Mali, 2004–2012.)

External links

  • 2 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • 16 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine – two new Malian generals, total eight
  • – "Closing ceremony of JCET training for Malian army"