The immediate beneficiaries of this proposed exit strategy by France will be the Islamist extremists. To stop this from happening, France and its partners need to re-calibrate their focus beyond military interventions to strengthening state capacity across the region. To do this efficiently and effectively, they need to expend political capital across the region by carrying along key stakeholders including elites, locals and traditional rulers, all of whom have a say in the peace process, while helping to provide the platforms and environment for these conversations to take place.
AuthorFolahanmi Aina
Folahanmi Aina is a Doctoral Candidate in Leadership Studies with reference to security and development, King's College London.
He has a BSc (Hons) in Political Science, from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria, an MSc in African Studies from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in International Development Policy from Seoul National university, Seoul, South Korea.
He has worked as a Research Analyst at the Royal United Services Institute for Security and Defense, (RUSI), London. He has also worked as an Independent Consultant on Lake Chad and Boko Haram for the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), London.