On April 25, 2026, the Mali attack on Bamako shocked the world — 12,000 fighters, 5 cities, one night. Here is what the Russia Africa Corps and Malian army did to stop it — and what the weapons left behind reveal about who is really funding this war.
Between JNIM — Al-Qaeda's most active Sahel affiliate — and the Azawad Liberation Front, this was the largest coordinated offensive in Mali's recent history. Defense Minister Sadio Camara was killed. Kidal fell. And among the weapons recovered from the attackers were French-made Mistral missiles and American Stinger MANPADS. This video breaks down what actually happened, the hidden alliance that made it possible, and the three documented weapons pipelines nobody is talking about loudly enough.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

WHAT THIS VIDEO COVERS
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
→ The April 25th coordinated offensive across Bamako, Gao, Kidal, Kita, and Sévaré
→ How the Russia Africa Corps and Malian
army responded and held the capital
→ The JNIM and Tuareg FLA cooperation deal that most coverage missed completely
→ Three documented pipelines: Libya 2011, Ukraine 2022, and battlefield capture
→ What the Alliance of Sahel States means for the region and the continent
→ Why military capacity alone cannot solve a political problem
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

SOURCES USED IN THIS VIDEO
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
This analysis draws on reporting and research from Al Jazeera, BBC Africa, NPR, Reuters, and France 24 for breaking news coverage of the April 25th attacks. Conflict data and security analysis come from ACLED (Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project), the Soufan Center — specifically analyst Wassim Nasr on the JNIM-FLA cooperation deal — and the International Crisis Group. Weapons proliferation research is sourced from the Heritage Foundation, ISS
Africa, the Arms Control Association, and the Small Arms Survey. Strategic analysis comes from The Sentry's April 2026 report on Russia's expanding West Africa footprint, the Lansing Institute's post-attack assessment of the Africa Corps model, and Human Rights Watch reporting on U.S. sanctions policy toward Mali. All claims are attributed to their original sources within the video.
In tonight's edition, Assimi Goïta addresses the nation in a first video appearance since coordinated attacks hit Mali. Also, in Nigeria, Islamic State says it carried out an attack in Adamawa State that killed at least 29 people. And amid the conflicts in the Middle East and elsewhere, there are concerns that the war in Sudan is being forgotten.