The United States has officially handed over its last military base in Niger, marking the end of its military presence in the African nation. The U.S. Department of Defense and Niger’s Department of National Defense announced on Monday that the withdrawal of American troops and assets from Air Base 201 in Agadez is complete.
Air Base 201, situated near Agadez, underwent significant improvements by the United States, but will no longer be able to enjoy the fruits of these costly investments. U.S. troops had been present in Niger for years, providing military training and supporting missions against Islamic State and al-Qaeda in the region.
Following a military coup in July of 2023, a pro-Russian military junta took over Niger, ousting the Western-backed president. The National Pulse reported that neighboring nations and the Biden-Harris government in the U.S. initially threatened to intervene and restore the country’s former leader. However, by April of this year, Russian forces had begun to move in, with Biden conceding to the junta and announcing a withdrawal of U.S. troops.
GEOPOLITICS.
In recent years, Russia has similarly supplanted the U.S. and its allies in Mali, Burkina Faso, and other states in the region.
The National Pulse Editor-in-Chief Raheem Kassam noted last year that while reductions to U.S. foreign entanglements are positive—with many Americans opposing foreign interventionism—the Niger situation is more akin to a military defeat.
“In fact, while troops coming home is something to be celebrated, they’re not coming home because they’ve secured any kind of long-term strategic victory in the region—not even by globalist standards,” Kassam said.
“Biden’s apparatus has humiliated America again and leaves dangerous parts of the world in worse situations than when they took office,” he explained.