US military intervention in Niger

US military intervention in Niger
Part of Jihadist insurgency in Niger and War on terror (Operation Juniper Shield)

U.S. and Nigerien soldiers training in April 2018
Date5 February 2013 – 5 August 2024
(11 years and 6 months)
Location
Result

Failure of American forces in suppressing jihadists

  • Niger's junta ended a military agreement that allowed US troops to be deployed in the country
  • US lost access to Niger Air Base 201, largest drone base in Africa built by the United States for $110 million
  • Beginning of new military cooperation between Niger and Russia
  • Jihadi groups linked to Al-Qaeda, the Islamic State group and Boko Haram remained still active in Niger in 2024
Belligerents

 United States

In support of:
 Niger
(until coup d'état)
 France
Operation Barkhane
(2014–23)

Training:
 European Union
EUCAP Sahel Niger
(2012–24)

 Canada
Operation Naberius
(2013–24)

 Belgium
 Germany
(2015–2024)
 Italy

Jihadists:
Al-Qaeda


 ISIL


Commanders and leaders

Joe Biden
(2021–2024)
Donald Trump
(2017–2021)
Barack Obama
(2013–2017)
Jim Mattis
Thomas D. Waldhauser
James C. Vechery

Emmanuel Macron
(2017–2023)
François Hollande
(2014–2017)

Iyad Ag Ghaly


Adnan Abu Walid al-Sahrawi 
Abubakar Shekau 
Abu Musab al-Barnawi
Doundou Chefou


Abubakar Shekau 

Abu Umaimata
Strength
1,000 personnel ISIL-West Africa: ~3,500 fighters (April 2018)
ISGS: ~300 fighters
Casualties and losses

5 killed (1 non hostile)
4 injured (2 non hostile)

5 killed, 8 wounded (While operating with the United States)

1 killed (non hostile) (while operating with the United States)

32 militants killed in two separate attacks

Unknown killed in other attacks between 2015 and 2017

Unknown killed by drone strikes in Southern Libya

At least 1 weapons cache

The US military intervention in Niger was the deployment of special operations forces and unmanned aerial vehicles by the United States in support of the Nigerien government and French military in counter-terrorism operations against militant groups in Niger as part of Operation Juniper Shield. The deployment of U.S. forces in Niger and in the greater West Africa region involved the training of host nation partner forces, enhancement of host nation security assistance efforts, and facilitated counter-terrorism and surveillance and reconnaissance missions in support of host nation partner forces. The U.S. deployed drones from the Air Force and CIA in order to assist American and Nigerien forces in counter-terrorism operations, monitor routes used by militants in Niger into neighboring nations, and to assist operations in Libya.

The deployment of US troops in Niger had been largely unreported until the 2017 Tongo Tongo ambush by Islamic State in the Greater Sahara militants left four American and four Nigerien soldiers dead. The ambush created controversy in the public and media with many people asking as to why the US had so many troops across Africa and specifically Niger which at the time had more than 800 US personnel in country.

In July 2023, the Nigerien coup d'état occurred, leading to the Nigerien crisis.

In April 2024, the US Department of State agreed to pull out all 1,000 US troops from the country. The Pentagon confirmed that US troops would complete their withdrawal from Niger by mid-September 2024. The process was complete by 5 August 2024.

After 11 years of US military presence, Jihadi groups linked to Al-Qaeda, the Islamic State group and Boko Haram remained still active with numerous attacks and dozens killed in Niger in 2023 and 2024.