Hopes for Dialogue Dim in Niger as Junta Clings to Power
A leader of the coup in Niger who had been considered a close U.S. ally rejected a request from a visiting U.S. diplomat to release the country’s democratically elected president and bring back constitutional order.
Members of a military council that staged a coup in Niger attending a rally at a stadium in the capital, Niamey, on Sunday.Credit…Reuters
The new military leaders of Niger have rebuffed diplomatic efforts by the United States, the United Nations and regional groups to resolve a crisis sparked by a coup in the West African nation, dimming hopes that civilian rule will be restored soon.
The soldiers who took over Niger last month refused to meet a delegation of envoys on Tuesday from the United Nations, the African Union and the Economic Community of West African States, the 15-member regional bloc known as ECOWAS.
A day earlier, Victoria Nuland, the acting U.S. deputy secretary of state, made a surprise trip to Niger but left after talks with one of the coup leaders that she described as “extremely frank and at times quite difficult.”
The general she met with had been trained in the United States and was considered a close U.S. military ally. But Ms. Nuland said that he offered no assurances that President Mohamed Bazoum of Niger would be reinstated or that civilian rule would be restored. And she was denied a meeting with the junta’s leader, Gen. Abdourahmane Tchiani.
The situation in Niger has threatened to derail years of Western security and aid assistance to one of the world’s poorest countries and a key ally in a region stricken by widespread instability that has been the site of seven military takeovers in less than three years.
Niger, a landlocked nation of 25 million people, hosts at least 2,600 Western troops, including 1,100 Americans, who have trained the country’s military and used it as a base to monitor Islamist insurgencies.
The future of that partnership now appears to be in doubt, as the generals who seized power in Niger have severed military ties with France, which has 1,500 troops in the country, and said little about whether they plan to continue cooperating with the United States.
Understand the Military Coup in Niger
A takeover. Military officers in the West African nation of Niger announced on July 26 that they had ousted the country’s president, Mohamed Bazoum, throwing into uncertainty the future of one of the West’s few reliable partners in a region marred by coups and insecurity. Here is what to know:
How did the coup unfold? Members of Niger’s presidential guard encircled the president’s palace in Niamey, the capital, and detained him. A group of army officials representing different branches of the military later declared on national television that they had “put an end to the regime” of Bazoum and a general was announced as the head of the transitional leadership. Bazoum, who has sounded a defiant note and was in touch with world leaders, appears to be trapped in limbo.
How have other countries responded? Recent takeovers in West Africa were largely met with shrugs, but the reaction to this one has been different. The United States and France have threatened to cut ties with Niger and suspended military cooperation. Neighboring countries have threatened to go to war. A regional bloc of countries known as ECOWAS issued the junta an ultimatum, and the evacuation of some foreigners is underway.
How have people in Niger reacted? After Bazoum was detained, hundreds briefly demonstrated in the streets of Niamey to demand his release before being violently dispersed by security forces. The Nigerien government called on the public to reject the coup, and there have also been protests in support of the takeover.
What could the events mean for Niger and West Africa? A successful coup could further destabilize a poor country and create an opening for extremists to expand their presence. Bazoum became president in 2021 in Niger’s first peaceful, democratic transition since it gained independence from France in 1960, ending a period that saw multiple coups. The recent turmoil has prompted fears that the crisis could spill over into a regional war.
Ms. Nuland said shortly before departing from Niger that she had offered several options to a coup leader to resolve the stalemate and maintain the relationship with the United States. But, she added, “I would not say that we were in any way taken up on that offer.”
She told reporters that she was denied a meeting with Mr. Bazoum, who has been detained in his private residence since July 26, and General Tchiani, who removed him from power.
Diplomats and officials from West Africa said they still were hoping for a peaceful resolution to the crisis, even after an ultimatum from ECOWAS for the coup leaders to relinquish power expired on Sunday.
ECOWAS, which has threatened military action against the coup leaders, is scheduled to meet for an extraordinary summit on Thursday. It has frozen financial transactions with Niger and closed borders between the country and its neighbors. Niger’s junta closed the country’s airspace on Sunday evening.
The streets of Niamey, the capital, remained calm on Tuesday despite soaring food prices and blackouts that have become more frequent since Nigeria, which supplies more than two-thirds of Niger’s electricity, suspended its supply after the coup.
Hundreds of young people have posted themselves at the city’s roundabouts at night to check for suspicious cars and weapons, heeding a call by the junta to defend the country.
Mr. Bazoum remained locked in his private residence with his wife and one of his sons, who is in his early 20s. The mutineers have cut electricity and water to the house, said a friend and adviser to Mr. Bazoum who requested anonymity to discuss the president’s situation.
Among the West African officials still sounding rare notes of optimism was Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou, Mr. Bazoum’s prime minister, who was in Rome during the coup and is now in Paris. He said in a telephone interview on Monday that “the president has not resigned” and there could still be “a happy outcome.”
“The junta doesn’t have a firm hold on Niger’s institutions and constitutional order,” he said. “The institutions can still be put back in place.”
However, hours after Mr. Mahamadou spoke with The Times, the junta in Niger said it had replaced him with a new prime minister, Lamine Zen, a civilian and former finance minister.
The junta also named a new head to the country’s presidential guard, the unit tasked with protecting Mr. Bazoum but which detained him last month. General Tchiani, who led the unit at the time of the coup, now appears to be in charge of the country.
Nearly two weeks after the coup, the military leaders have not announced a timeline for a transition or when elections might take place.
It was unclear how Ms. Nuland, the U.S. envoy, was able to reach Niamey despite the airspace closure. The coup leader she met with was Gen. Moussa Salaou Barmou, the former head of Niger’s special forces. Once a close partner of the United States, he was named chief of staff of Niger’s military shortly after the coup.
General Barmou was trained at Fort Benning, Ga., and the National Defense University in Washington. American military commanders who worked with General Barmou expressed shock that he had joined the coup’s senior ranks.
“I’m disappointed and surprised,” said J. Marcus Hicks, a retired two-star Air Force general who headed American Special Operations forces in Africa. “Barmou was one of the most competent and capable senior African military leaders I dealt with.”
Ms. Nuland added that she had warned Mr. Barmou and other coup leaders against partnering with the Wagner paramilitary group from Russia, as neighboring Mali has done.
“The people who have taken this action here understand very well the risks to their sovereignty when Wagner is invited in,” she said.
In an interview with the BBC on Tuesday, Secretary of State Anthony J. Blinken said he did not believe that Russia or the Wagner group was behind the coup in Niger, but that “they tried to take advantage of it.”
Source: Michael Crowley contributed reporting from Washington, and Omar Hama Saley from Niamey, Niger.