ISIS Claims French Crash in Mali as Macron ‘Looks Into’ Strategic Options
An ISIS group affiliate claimed responsibility Thursday for
a helicopter collision that killed 13 French soldiers earlier this week in
Mali, while France’s president said he will reassess the country's military
operation in West and Central Africa after its deadliest toll in nearly four
decades.
The ISIS in the Greater Sahara statement, with no evidence,
came almost three days after the low-flying helicopters collided on a moonless
night while pursuing extremists near the border with Niger. An investigation
has begun into the cause of the crash and the flight data recorders have been
found.
French military spokesman Col. Frederic Barbry said the
military would not comment on the claim. Shortly after the crash, Army Chief of
Staff Gen. Francois Lecointre said the helicopters had been supporting French
forces on the ground pursuing fighters with the ISIS affiliate.
French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters that “our
mission there is important, yet what we are now living in the Sahel leads us to
look into all strategic options.”
He said the government and military will work on the issue
in the coming weeks.
Macron this week defended France’s largest overseas military
mission, which involves 4,500 troops, saying it is aimed at enhancing France’s
own security and providing support to African countries.
The helicopter collision drew global attention to an
emerging front for ISIS-linked groups as ISIS loses strength in its core area
in Syria and Iraq. Counterterror officials have worried about the risk of
fighters fleeing that region for Africa’s sprawling Sahel, the arid strip south
of the Sahara Desert.
Extremist groups have been using forested areas along the
poorly defended border areas of Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso to find refuge
while spreading south into more populated areas.
France has been outspoken on the need for more global
support for counterterror operations in the Sahel, especially funding for the
five-nation G5 Sahel counterterror force that was created two years ago.
France intervened in Mali in 2013 after extremists seized
control of major towns in the north. They were forced back into the desert,
where they have regrouped.
The collision of the two helicopters brought to 41 the
number of French troops killed in the Sahel region since France's intervention.
A new surge in extremist attacks in Mali has killed well
over 100 local troops in the past two months, with ISIS often claiming
responsibility.