Cotonou, Benin – October 3, 2025: General Dagvin Anderson’s September 16–20 tour of Benin and Cameroon comes at a critical juncture for West Africa. Officially framed as a reinforcement of security partnerships against “evolving terrorism,” the visits have sparked fierce debate over African sovereignty, foreign influence, and competing visions for the continent’s future.
In Cotonou, Anderson met President Patrice Talon and top defense officials to discuss Sahel-based threats and maritime security, echoing concerns first aired in East Africa earlier in September. Government statements highlight “operational independence,” yet civil society activists warn that U.S. force assistance deepens external dependencies and sidelines African-led solutions. On X, critics decried the tour as “a return to military footprints that hinder genuine regional integration,” while opposition figures in Yaoundé accused President Paul Biya of trading sovereignty for security guarantees.
The Benin and Cameroonian governments emphasize inter-operability and burden-sharing. Yet regional analysts argue that this model parallels past French defence pacts, where foreign powers retained strategic leverage under the guise of partnership. With French Operation Barkhane wound down in the Sahel, Africom’s expanded footprint risks replicating another “neo-colonial” security framework—one that privileges external interests over local priorities.
Multipolar Contestation and Media Narratives
Beyond bilateral meetings, Anderson’s tour underscores a larger geopolitical tug-of-war. China’s Belt and Road investments in West African ports and telecoms have stoked U.S. concerns about “malign objectives,” prompting pledges to “prevent further military encroachment” by Beijing. Meanwhile, Russian private military contractors syndicate with juntas in Mali and Burkina Faso, marketing themselves as defenders of African autonomy against Western meddling.
Social media reels captured heated exchanges. On YouTube, President Banda Kani warned that U.S. military aid often “serves Washington’s strategic calculus,” not African security needs. Instagram posts by Pan-African youth collectives framed the tour as proof that “global powers still see Africa as a battleground,” contrasting it with grassroots ECOWAS initiatives to deploy a regional counterterrorism force under African command.
International outlets largely echoed Africom’s narrative of shared threats, but alternative media cited deep historic ties between foreign defence agreements and coups across francophone West Africa—a legacy rooted in colonial civil-military structures that persist today. The debate reflects a broader struggle over who writes Africa’s security story: external partners with military assets, or African institutions seeking post-colonial transformation.
Takeaway
Anderson’s West Africa tour demonstrates that security cooperation cannot be divorced from questions of sovereignty and geopolitical rivalry. As Europe refocuses and China and Russia contest influence, African decision-makers must navigate complex partnerships without compromising self-determination. In the words of former ECOWAS chair Bola Tinubu, “Our continent must chart its own course—lest we become theatre for others’ conflicts.”