U.S. Seeks Ways to Help Burkina Faso’s Military Junta Fight Jihadists

Officials want to counter Islamists, but U.S. law bans most security aid to military regimes

Burkina Faso took part in a recent annual military training exercise in Jacqueville, in neighboring Ivory Coast. Legnan Koula/Shutterstock

ACCRA, Ghana—The Biden administration is quietly helping Burkina Faso’s ruling junta battle al Qaeda and Islamic State in a hotly contested corner of West Africa, without running afoul of U.S. laws banning most security aid to military regimes.

The U.S. has included Burkinabe commandos in American-led exercises, but excluded the West African country’s top officer from an international gathering of defense chiefs after a military takeover last year. The Pentagon has a team of U.S. Green Berets stationed in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso’s capital, but won’t allow them to train their beleaguered local counterparts.

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