Madagascar’s Junta: Opening the Door for Moscow?

Executive Summary

In October, Madagascar suffered its fifth coup since 1975. While this fits a pattern of non-democratic government upsets in Africa over many decades, it is unique as part of a batch of recent overthrows on the continent, only the second outside the Sahel, and as going against international hopes that the Malagasy had broken free of the cycle of overthrows with its recent ranking as Africa’s 12th strongest democracy.

Under the new military rule, Russia will likely move quickly to shore up its long-standing interest in Madagascar, partly by exploiting the aid vacuum created by U.S. aid cuts. We cannot rule out the possibility of Moscow’s involvement in the recent change of government. The regime change will likely affect the US and allied critical mining projects. Additionally, we cannot rule out the possibility of state intervention, possibly under pressure from Moscow, to cancel them.

Jais Picariello

Table of Contents

Related Content

Erik Prince in the Congo: U.S. Proxy in Critical Minerals Cold War with China?

Location:_ Central Africa
Locked

US-Israeli Missile Interceptors: Reduced Stockpile Triggers Concern, Procurement Shifts

Location:_ MENA

Mali: Jihadist Offensive Kills Defense Minister, Takes Towns, Presses Bamako

Location:_ North Africa

Stay in the loop

Get a free weekly email that makes reading
intel articles and reports actually enjoyable.

Table of Contents

Log in

Stay in the loop

Join thousands of people receiving ground truth based reports that affect their business, investments and personal life.

Contact

Contact

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.