Alliance of Sahel States

Alliance of Sahel States
Alliance des États du Sahel (French)
Anthem: Sahel Benkan
Alliance of Sahel States (red)
CapitalBamako, Mali
Lingua francaFrench
DemonymSahélien
TypeConfederation
Member States
Leaders
• President
Ibrahim Traoré
Establishment6 July 2024
Area
• Total
2,781,392 km2 (1,073,901 sq mi) (8th)
• Water (%)
0.74
Population
• 2024 estimate
71,375,590 (20th)
• Density
25.7/km2 (66.6/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2024 estimate
• Total
$179.357 billion
• Per capita
$2,513
GDP (nominal)2024 estimate
• Total
$62.380 billion
• Per capita
$874
CurrencyWest African CFA franc (XOF)
Time zoneUTC+0 / +1 (GMT / WAT)

The Alliance of Sahel States (French: Alliance des États du Sahel; AES), also known as the Confederation of Sahel States (French: Confédération des États du Sahel) or AES Confederation, is a confederation formed between Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso, located in the Sahel region of Africa. It originated as a mutual defense pact created on 16 September 2023 following the 2023 Nigerien crisis, in which the West African political bloc ECOWAS threatened to intervene militarily following a successful coup d'état in Niger earlier that year. All three member states are former members of ECOWAS and currently under the control of juntas following a string of successful coups, the 2021 Malian coup d'état, the September 2022 Burkina Faso coup d'état, and the 2023 Niger coup d'état. The confederation was established on 6 July 2024.

The confederation's stated goal is to pool resources to build energy and communications infrastructure, establish a common market, implement a monetary union under proposed currency, allow free movement of persons, enable industrialization, and invest in agriculture, mines and the energy sector. The confederation is against neo-colonialism and has demonstrated this with acts such as downgrading the status of the French language, renaming of colonial street names, and in the case of Mali suspending teaching of the French Revolution in schools. The AES is also anti-French and anti-ECOWAS in outlook, as it disagrees with many of their policies.

The economic outlook for AES countries is positive (Burkina 5.494%, Mali 3.751%, and Niger 9.869% GDP growth in 2024), with Niger becoming the 3rd fastest growing economy in the world and the fastest growing economy in Africa in 2024, though nations of the AES are among the least developed in the world as measured by the Human Development Index. Factors such as prolonged periods of ineffective governance, external geopolitical influences, jihadist groups, and imbalanced trade agreements that provided minimal infrastructure improvement or benefits to local populations, contributed to economic and social challenges in these countries. The NGO Amnesty International has accused AES governments of engaging in routine human rights violations including arbitrary detentions, forced disappearances, and massacres of civilians. AES states have all pledged to suspend military rule and return to civilian rule, but these plans have been delayed in each of these countries as the governments work towards increased integration.

The AES successfully launched a common biometric passport and identity card travel documents in January 2025 to coincide with the formalization of the AES confederation and exit from ECOWAS.  The passport, launched to facilitate travel for AES citizens, meets international standards. In September 2025, Burkina Faso went a step further and eliminated visa fees for all African travelers, although travelers must still complete an online application for approval.

Within the territory of the AES, there are various terrorist and insurgent groups including ISSP, Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin, and various separatist rebels fighting in Northern Mali such as the Azawad Movement. In 2024, the AES cut off military relations with Western powers and replaced Western military forces on their territory with Russian mercenaries, specifically the Wagner Group. It has also cut diplomatic ties and expelled ambassadors from some Western countries such as Sweden following critical statements regarding its rapprochement with Russia.