Operation Serval

Operation Serval
Part of the Mali War and the War in the Sahel


(Top) A French Dassault Rafale of squadron 2/92 "Aquitaine" refuels from a KC-135 Stratotanker over Africa on 17 March 2013.

(Bottom) French troops arriving in Bamako.
Date11 January 2013 – 15 July 2014 (1 year, 6 months and 4 days)
Location
Result

Malian/French victory

  • All major cities controlled by French/Malian troops and other allied troops.
  • France launched Operation Barkhane on 1 August 2014.
Belligerents

France
Mali
Chad
Nigeria
Burkina Faso
Senegal
Togo
MNLA (latter part of conflict)
AFISMA
Supported by:
Belgium
Canada
Denmark
Germany
Netherlands
Spain
Sweden
Poland
Australia
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom

United States

Islamic militants

Commanders and leaders

François Hollande
ADM. Édouard Guillaud
Dioncounda Traoré (until 4 Sept. 2013)
Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta (from 4 Sept. 2013)
Mahamat Déby Itno

Bilal Ag Acherif
Abdelhamid Abou Zeid  
Iyad ag Ghali
Omar Ould Hamaha  
Mokhtar Belmokhtar
Abdel Krim  
Strength

4,000 French troops deployed (5,100 involved in total),

2,900 AFISMA

Elements of:

  • between 5,000 and 10,000 fighters (Ansar Dine)
  • 1,000 fighters (AQIM)
  • 500 fighters (MOJWA)
Casualties and losses

9 killed
1 Gazelle helicopter lost
82 killed
38 killed
17 killed, 60 wounded
2 killed
1 killed
1 killed

2 killed
Between 600 and 1,000 killed
50 vehicles destroyed, 150 tons of ammunitions and 200 weapons seized, 60 IEDs defused
109-300 captured

Operation Serval (French: Opération Serval) was a French military operation to oust Islamic militants from the north of Mali, who had begun a push into the center of the country.

Operation Serval followed the United Nations Security Council Resolution 2085 of 20 December 2012 and an official request by the interim Malian government for French military assistance. The operation ended on 15 July 2014, and was replaced by Operation Barkhane, launched on 1 August 2014 to fight Islamist fighters in the Sahel. Three of the five Islamic leaders, Abdelhamid Abou Zeid, Abdel Krim and Omar Ould Hamaha were killed, while Mokhtar Belmokhtar fled to Libya and Iyad ag Ghali fled to Algeria.

The operation was named after the serval, a medium-sized African wild cat.