Jihadist groups push from West Africa's Sahel toward the Gulf of Guinea coast
A UN assessment finds armed groups in the Sahel are no longer just launching attacks: they administer territory, control trade routes, exploit new technologies, and are extending their reach toward coastal West African states
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Summary
Armed groups in West Africa's Sahel are no longer operating as mobile insurgencies, a UN assessment published July 14 found. Jihadist groups now administer territories, control trade routes, leverage new technologies, and are pushing steadily toward the Gulf of Guinea, according to UN News. The Africa Center for Strategic Studies placed the trend in a wider frame, describing militant Islamist groups across the Sahel, Somalia, and the Lake Chad Basin as increasingly capable and expanding, suggesting the threat is widening across theatres rather than concentrating in one.
The split
The UN framing emphasises a structural shift: jihadist groups graduating from hit-and-run attacks to territorial governance and economic control. The Africa Center broadens the geographic scope to Somalia and Lake Chad alongside the Sahel, pointing to a pan-regional dynamic rather than isolated national failures. The Stimson Center, International Crisis Group, and Homeland Security Today published parallel analyses of the coastal creep and JNIM's strategic dilemma, though those texts were not accessible for this edition.
By the numbers
- 3 regions named by Africa Center: Sahel, Somalia, Lake Chad Basin
- Gulf of Guinea coast, the stated new frontier of jihadist expansion
Why it matters
The shift from guerrilla tactics to territorial administration gives armed groups sustainable revenue, local recruitment, and the ability to hold ground rather than merely contest it. Coastal West African states, long insulated from the Sahel's worst violence, now face a different threat calculus. Several of them operate outside the security frameworks adopted by the Sahel's military-led governments, and no coordinated regional response exists.
What to watch
- Whether coastal states (Benin, Togo, Ghana, Côte d'Ivoire) formally acknowledge new armed-group presence near their northern borders
- Any changes to regional counter-insurgency coordination as the Sahel military juntas' isolation from Western partners deepens
- Reports of jihadist groups taxing or administering specific trade corridors in the Sahel interior