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TRSports12 days ago

Niger’s turn to Türkiye signals new partnership model in Sahel

Niger's President Abdourahamane Tiani visited Türkiye in June 2026, marking a significant shift in Niger's foreign policy. During the visit, several agreements were signed covering areas such as higher education, healthcare, defense, and trade. The visit emphasized an 'equal partnership' between Niger and Türkiye, reflecting broader geopolitical dynamics in the Sahel region.

Nigerien President Abdourahamane Tiani arrived in Ankara on June 3, 2026, and was welcomed the next day at the Presidential Complex. The welcoming ceremony, featuring a cavalry unit, a 21-gun salute and flags representing 16 Turkic states, signaled more than just a routine protocol event. Tiani’s choice of Türkiye for his first official visit outside Africa points to Niamey’s new foreign policy orientation.

The Ankara meetings went beyond ceremony. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan framed the relationship through “equal partnership, mutual respect and win-win principles,” a phrasing that resonates in the Sahel, where the tone of external engagement has become almost as important as the content of cooperation. Following discussions with Erdoğan, four agreements were signed in the fields of higher education, the joint economic and commercial committee, the Niger-Türkiye Friendship Hospital, and diplomatic training. Defense industry, security, trade, investment, energy, mining, agriculture, education and health also shaped the agenda.

At first glance, the visit may look like another bilateral meeting. Yet the Sahel’s political climate, Niger’s geopolitical position and Türkiye’s growing African presence give it a wider meaning. The Ankara-Niamey axis now signals a new language of partnership in the Sahel.

Sahel looking for partners

Over the past decade, the Mali-Burkina Faso-Niger cooperation has become one of global politics’ most demanding zones. Border security, counterterrorism, economic fragility, external pressure and governance capacity are being tested together. Regional capitals are now reassessing the results of older approaches.

Niger’s turn toward Ankara goes beyond diplomatic diversification. Niamey cares about the tone of the approach as much as the offer itself. For years, many Sahel capitals relied on single-centered partnerships; that model is now giving way to a more selective and sovereignty-oriented approach.

The withdrawal of France’s military presence from the region, the U.S. departure from its bases in Niger, and the withdrawal of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger from the regional bloc Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) all indicate that the Sahel is seeking its own path. This search sometimes appears harsh and at other times risky, yet it cannot be interpreted as an unplanned drift. Regional capitals, Niamey foremost among them, are acting through their own calculations. For Niamey, diversification widens sovereign room for maneuver and turns external engagement into a field of choice, agency and balance.

Türkiye enters this new Sahel equation from a different position. Ankara carries no colonial legacy in the region. Its relationship with Niger combines various fields. For countries like Niger, partnership now means more than political support. It means working together, strengthening institutions and touching people’s daily lives.

Defense relations

Defense relations between Türkiye and Niger had begun before this visit. In 2022, Niger opted for a defense package including Bayraktar TB2 drones, Hürkuş light attack aircraft and armored vehicles. This step arose from the need to monitor the field in the Sahel, track border lines and build a more flexible capacity to counter mobile groups.

The defense relationship between Ankara and Niamey has also gained institutional foundations through the Military Financial Cooperation Agreement, signed in July 2025, and the on-site training support protocol, signed in April 2026. During the Ankara talks, Erdoğan also said Türkiye was ready to share its counterterrorism experience and that contacts between the Nigerien delegation and Turkish defense companies were expected to produce positive results.

Tiani’s visit to the drone facility in Türkiye should therefore not be viewed as a mere factory tour. A leader’s visit to the production site of the systems they use also reflects the level of trust in the relationship. Such visits move beyond a buyer-seller dynamic to emphasize a shared partnership.

What sets Ankara apart here is that its role is not limited to just delivering equipment. Military training, maintenance, logistical support and personnel capacity also form part of the ongoing process. Many countries in the Sahel that acquire security equipment face their true test in sustainably utilizing it.

The model Türkiye offers here appears more practical. Instead of the profile of a seller who simply sends drones and ends the relationship, the profile of a partner who follows up on the process through training and institutional engagement is taking center stage. In today’s Sahel, security partnerships are judged less by who delivers the first drone and more by who is still there when the maintenance bill arrives.

Invisible diplomacy

The most notable aspect of the agreements in Ankara is the inclusion of civilian sectors alongside the defense agenda. The higher education protocol, the joint op…

Read the full article at Daily Sabah

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Daily SabahParty-alignedCenter12 days ago
Niger’s turn to Türkiye signals new partnership model in Sahel

Niger's President Abdourahamane Tiani visited Türkiye in June 2026, marking a significant shift in Niger's foreign policy. During the visit, several agreements were signed covering areas such as higher education, healthcare, defense, and trade. The visit emphasized an 'equal partnership' between Niger and Türkiye, reflecting broader geopolitical dynamics in the Sahel region.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about a state visit and agreements without overtly favoring any political perspective. It focuses on the formal aspects of the visit and does not include subjective commentary or biased language.